Desert Exposure - October 2016

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exposure

Fiesta y Mรกs Page 10

Arts & Leisure in Southern New Mexico

Elephant Butte Dam Celebrates 100 Years Page 28-29

Table Talk Page 41

October 2016 Volume 21 โ ข Number 10

Cancer Reconstruction Hand Surgery Cosmetic Procedures Paul Pau u M. Phillips, M.D.

MMCLC.org

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AMAZING DEAL UNDER $77k + $2,000 closing cost assistance on full price offer! 2 homes for the price of one on 3+ Generous kitchen, built in china cabinet/ acres. Both recently updated - 2 buffet and breakfast bar. Handicapbedroom/2 bath singlewide with a log accessible features: ramp at front, open floor plan for easy access to main rooms, sided addition plus site built 1 bedroom/ 1 bath guest house. Gorgeous yard wide doors to over-sized master suite, with mature landscaping, abundant step-in shower. Oversized laundry room has wildlife and fantastic mountain views. room for additional frig/freezer or pantry. Three walk-in closets; dual pane windows; Large storage building, well house, and 2 detached carports. Main dwelling 12’x16’ covered deck, est 8’x8 front deck. features open floor plan with den and Property features circle drive, 16’x12’ shop sunroom. Guest house features nice with lighting and outlets, fenced orchard deck. with 8 fruit trees. Recent improvements include 30-year shingles, evaporative cooler pump, duct work, register covers, ceiling fans, light fixtures, back door, washer and dryer. Additional acreage available on both sides. For the flying enthusiast, a taxiway lot on the backside also available

MLS# 33669 • $125,000

MLS# 33606 • $337,500

Rolling hills, large seasonal pond, views to the mountains and across the desert to the far south. Ducks, deer elk, quail share this huge slice of secluded paradise, only 15 minutes to town!

US FOREST BOUNDARY! 3.9 ACRE PLOT WITH NEWER ELECTRICAL SERVICE, OLD WELL, & MOSTLY FENCED. SET BELOW THE SANDSTONE BLUFFS, THIS PROPERTY HAS SOME FLAT LAND & A LEVEL BUILDING SITE SET UP HIGH. Tall trees, secluded & private. Come live the life in the upper Mimbres Valley!

EXPAND IN BAYARD Here’s a cozy home tucked away in Bayard awaiting the finishwork on an expansion the previous owner began. Roomy 2 or 3 bedroom floorplan with outbuildings and nice backyard. Separate carport. Priced to sell at $65,000. #33593

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MLS# 33630 • $119,000 COMMERCIAL OFFICE BUILDING ON BUSY HIGHWAY 90/HUDSON ST. Near the historic downtown & city offices, this 1,200 sq.ft. bldg. has a large reception area, three private offices, kitchen area, and 3/4 bath. Parking area on the side & front. Take a look!

MLS# 33592 • $169,500

HANDYMAN SPECIAL Great opportunity for a do-ityourself kinda buyer – a fire destroyed approximately half of the interior, but the rest is not bad, and ready for remodeling. Separate garage/workshop + nice fenced corner lot in Hurley. $39,000 or make an offer! #33635

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MLS# 33589 • $175,000 Best priced house in the neighborhood! This charming house features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with a fireplace, cute patios front and back in addition to a screened-in sunroom. All of this is on .239 acres close to town and amenities.

MLS# 33605 • $1,300,000

10,000+ SQ.FT. BLDG. with approx. 4,000 sq.ft. of loft areas. LOCATED ON BUSY STOP LIGHT CORNER OF US HIGHWAY 180 EAST & MEMORY LANE. 1.5 ACRES, PRIME CORNER, GOOD VISIBILITY, SOLID BUILDING, MANY IMPROVEMENTS. Three rentals bring in $2,750/month plus there are living quarters for owner. Fenced yard in the rear for storage. Overhead door for deliveries.

MLS# 33668 • $337,500

FANTASTIC RENOVATION ON THIS GREAT 3BD/2.5BA HOME WALKING 3BD/2.5BA SANTA FE TERRITORIAL DISTANCE TO UNIVERSITY & STYLE HOME ON 1.1 ACRES IN DOWNTOWN. Low care landscaping, INDIAN HILLS. PERCHED ON A fenced backyard, screened in patio/ HILLTOP WITH AMAZING VIEWS, porch attached to the rear of the THIS PROPERTY OFFERS PRIVACY home. Open floor plan with living/ YET IS CLOSE TO TOWN. Saltillo dining/kitchen, master bedroom/ tile, new kitchen/appliances, new bath & powder room on 1st floor, heat/ac, two living areas, fi replace, 2Bd/1Ba upstairs. Central heat & two sunrooms, covered patio, a/c, fireplace, new ceramic tile in rear courtyard. Come enjoy the living area - all in this newer, well southwestern lifestyle here! kept property.

MLS# 33619 • $255,000 4BD/2.5BA CUL-DE-SAC HOME ON 0.83 ACRE IN DESIRABLE INDIAN HILLS. Interior recently repainted, two living areas include dramatic vaulted ceilings, wet bar, fireplace, built-ins. Sun-room, master bedroom suite opens out to covered patio in the fenced backyard. Come see this southwestern style home with lots of character.


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DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 5

Contents 24 FORT CUMMINGS • Cooke’s Spring Site protected stage stop by Kathy Weiser

6 LETTERS • Readers share Prison bill and Social Security issues of the day 6 and 7 FUNNIES • Beezwax The bees are asking questions again

25 BORDERLINES • Generosity Times changing for New Mexico laborers

7 EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK • 100 years of park service by Elva K. Österreich 8 DESERT DIARY • Questionable time Some of our readers have a lot of questions

26 PUBLISHER’S NOTEBOOK • Time Out of Mind Looking for a time machine by Richard Coltharp 16 ARTS EXPOSURE • Seeking Imperfection Exhibit exposes artistic grunge

9 FACES AND PLACES • A Tularosa Halloween Treats, tricks and music bring Granado Street to life

17 ARTS EXPOSURE • Gallery Guide Area Gallery Locations

10 FIESTA Y MAS • Calling Tamale Makers Silver City event welcoming vendors

18 ARTS EXPOSURE • Dias de los Muertos Artisans sought for Silver City event 18 ARTS EXPOSURE • French Comedy A Servant of Two Masters 19 ON SCREEN • Lady Belladonna Film premieres in Las Cruces in October 20 FOR THE STAGE • A Sip of Tea Fundraiser evokes grandeur of the past

10 OFF THE VINE • Monks Help With Grape Harvest Winery makes wine in exchange for work by Billy Huntsman 12 IN THE GROUND • Paleontologist Visits for Talk Morgan to discuss late Cenozoic vertebrates

37 IN THE CARDS • Learn to Play Bridge Game keeps brain active by John Randall

20 MUSIC EXPOSURE • Hubby Jenkins Banjo player performs at Buckhorn Opera House 20 RED DOTS • Becoming an Art Collector Practical workshop offered by Victoria Chick

27 STARRY DOME • Telescopium, the Telescope A tale of galaxies by Bert Stevens

38 HIGH PLACES • Bluff Springs Finding old time treasures in the mountains by Gabriele Teich 39 RED OR GREEN • Hot Pairings Tips for chile with wine, beer by Adriana M. Chavez 41 TABLE TALK • Tapas Tree Grill Celebrating a year with Hub business by Lucy Whitmarsh

28 WATER CONTROL • Elephant Butte Dam Centennial events planned by William Dooley

42 RED OR GREEN • Dining Guide Restaurants in southwest New Mexico

30 WRITING CONTEST • Driving Me Crazy Jim Duchene’s story about his father earns him the grand prize

46 FOOTBALL FOLLIES • A Little Pain Can’t Hurt You Joining a full-contact league by Susie Ouderkirk

31 WRITING CONTEST • The Omen Mike Fugagli’s short story earns kudos

47 40 DAYS AND 40 NIGHTS • Events Guide For October and a little beyond

55 LIVING ON WHEELS • Small Space Survival What to do about too-much-togetherness by Sheila Sowder

CORRECTION On Page 42 in the September 2016 issue of Desert Exposure in the article about “Delving into History,” during a hearing at which Edward Condon is being questioned, he is not at the forefront of the Communist Revolution, but rather, being falsely accused of being a member of the Communist Revolution.

CELEBRATING 12 YEARS

PILATES DANCING STONES STUDIO

32 WRITING CONTEST • Poetry Speaks Two honorable mentions poems earn tied place

109 N. BULLARD • SILVER CITY

33 TALKING HORSES • Lessons Learned Tasty summer leftovers by Scott Thomson 34 BODY, MIND & SPIRIT • Grant County Events Weekly happenings in Grant County

13 WATER FEST • Children on the Gila Alliance works on programs by Billy Huntsman

54 TUMBLEWEEDS • A Lifetime Adventure Seeing the country by rail by Lee Sonne

14 CHANGING SPACES • Time is a Circle Agencies protect the ancients by Joan E. Price

22 PICKING APPLES • Fresh Fruit Celebration Picking apples near Las Cruces

35 ON A MISSION • Weird Mountains of Trash Relief work in Louisiana by Joan E. Price

15 ARTS SCENE • Happenings Area galleries busy for September

23 RANDOM ACTS OF NONSENSE • Kim Jong-un Visiting an old college buddy by Jim Duchene

36 CYCLES OF LIFE • Need to Know Guiding through the streets by Gabriel Rochelle

52 IN THE PARK • Ren Faire Annual ArtsFaire in 45th year by Kathleen Albers 53 GOOD EXAMPLES • Women of Distinction Two from Silver City earn recognition 53 PRESERVING HISTORY • Domenici Exhibit NMSU Library focus on senator

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6 • OCTOBER 2016

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Letters

ABOUT THE COVER Artist Kay Susin was born in South Korea and has lived in New Mexico since 1997. She has studied Sumukhwa (traditional watercolor) but now works mostly with acrylic, oil and oil/pastel. The image on the cover of this month’s issue is “Old Clay Pot.” “The natural beauty of the area provides me with endless inspiration,” Susin said. “I especially like the Rio Grande, which presents a different view at every turn.” She is a member of the Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery, a co-op gallery of 30 artists located in historic Old Messila and was the featured Artist of the Month in August at the Julie Ford gallery in Las Cruces with “Impressions by Kay.” Her work was accepted for the 2014 and 2015 Sun Bowl Art Exhibits.

PUBLISHER

Richard Coltharp 575-524-8061 • editor@desertexposure.com

EDITOR

Elva K. Österreich 575-680-1978 • editor@desertexposure.com

ADVERTISING COORDINATOR Pam Rossi 575-635-6614 pam@lascrucesbulletin.com

DISTRIBUTION COORDINATOR Teresa Tolonen 575-680-1841 teresa@lascrucesbulletin.com

ADVERTISING SALES Silver City Ilene Wignall 575-313-0002 jiwignall@comcast.net Deming/Cloudcroft Claire Frohs 575-680-1844 claire@lascrucesbulletin.com

Otero County Pam Rossi 575-635-6614 pam@lascrucesbulletin.com Ruidoso Elaine Sasnow 575-635-1188 elaine@lascrucesbulletin.com

LAYOUT AND DESIGN

Cary J. Howard, Stacey Neal, Ryan Galloway

WEB DESIGNER Ryan Galloway

Move prison bill along Editor, The United States Congress faces a mountain of backlogged bills and other business. One urgent bill is the Sentencing Reform & Corrections Act. The Senate version is S. 2123, sponsored by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and cosponsored by 36 other senators from both sides of the aisle (Rand Paul, John Cornyn, Chuck Schumer and Patrick Leahy, but not including Sen. Tom Udall or Sen. Martin Heinrich). The Senate bill was reported out of committee on October 26, 2015 — 10 months ago! The companion bill in the House, H.R. 3713, is sponsored by Bob Goodlatte (R-Virginia) and has 73 cosponsors from both sides of the aisle (Jason Chaffetz, Raul Labrador, John Conyers and Luis Gutierrez, but not including Rep. Steve Pearce). The House bill was reported out of committee on November 18, 2015 — nine months ago! Both of these bills are sitting there, ready to be voted on — and nothing has happened. There is bipartisan agreement that we have too many people in prison for too long, often disproportionate to the severity of their crimes. Our FY 2015 federal prison bill was $6.9 billion! The real cost in terms of the

impact on human lives, social consequences and reduced incomes down the line is far greater. Think how much both costs could be reduced if courts had more discretion to fit the sentences to the circumstances of nonviolent offenders! Congressional leaders like sure things; they don’t want to risk defeat on a bill they bring to a vote. Please write Senators Udall and Heinrich and Rep. Pearce and ask them to support this legislation. Go to http://fcnl. org/issues/incarceration/end_ mass_incarceration/ for more information, and your message can be sent through http://capwiz.com/fconl/directory/congdir.tt. Tom Vaughan Silver City

Social Security is here to stay Editor, It’s healthy to be skeptical in a world of uncertainties. Major news networks sometimes broadcast conflicting facts that require a bit of research to verify. There is even a day in October dedicated to skeptics. Therefore, this is the perfect time to tell all the skeptics that there’s no reason to think Social Security won’t be here for you well into the future. Recently, the Social Security Board of Trustees released its 76th annual report to Congress

presenting the financial status of the Social Security trust funds for the short term and over the next 75 years. We are pleased that legislation signed into law by President Obama last November averted a near-term shortfall in the Disability Insurance (DI) trust fund that was detailed in a previous report. With that small, temporary reallocation of the Social Security contribution rate, the DI fund will now be able to pay full benefits until 2023, and the retirement fund will be adequate into 2035. It is important that members of Congress act well before 2023 in order to strengthen the finances of the program. As a whole, Social Security is fully funded until 2034, and after that, it is about three-quarters financed. Many people wonder if Social Security will be there for them. Here is a fact that will relieve any skepticism you might have: the increased cost of providing Social Security benefits for Baby Boomers is less than the nation’s increase in spending was for public education when the baby boomers were children. You can put your skepticism aside and rest assured that Social Security is with you today and will be with you tomorrow. You can read the entire report at www.socialsecurity.gov/OACT/ TR/2016. Ray Vigil Social Security Public Affairs Specialist in El Paso

COLUMNISTS Fr. Gabriel Rochelle, Marjorie Lilly, Sheila Sowder, Scott Thomson, Bert Stevens, Jim Duchene, Lucy Whitmarsh, Gabriele Teich 1740-A Calle de Mercado • Las Cruces, NM 88005 575-524-8061 www.desertexposure.com Desert Exposure is published monthly and distributed free of charge at choice establishments throughout southern New Mexico. Mail subscriptions are $54 for 12 issues. Single copies by mail $5. All contents © 2016 OPC News, LLC. All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be reproduced without written permission. All rights to material by outside contributors revert to the author. Views expressed in articles, advertisements, graphics and/or photos appearing in Desert Exposure do not necessarily reflect the views of the editors or advertisers. Desert Exposure is not responsible for unsolicited submissions of articles or artwork. Submissions by mail must include a self-addressed, stamped envelope for reply or return. It will be assumed that all submissions, including email letters, are intended for publication. All submissions, including letters to the editor, may be edited for length, style and content.

November

DEADLINES

December

January

October 13, noon:

November 7, noon:

December 12, noon:

October 14, noon:

November 8, noon:

December 13, noon:

Space reservation and ad copy due All stories and notices for the editorial section

I F Y O U H AV E A NY Q U ES TI O N S, P L E A S E C O N T A C T:

Space reservation and ad copy due All stories and notices for the editorial section

EDITOR Elva K. Österreich 575-680-1978 editor@desertexposure.com

Space reservation and ad copy due

SALES COORDINATOR Pam Rossi 575-635-6614 pam@lascrucesbulletin.com

All stories and notices for the editorial section SILVER CITY SALES MANAGER Ilene Wignall 575-313-0002 jiwignall@comcast.net


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 7

EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK • ELVA K. ÖSTERREICH

100 Years of Natural Wonder National parks celebrating birthday this year

A

s the United States celebrates 100 years of National Parks, the magnificent spaces remind us about the exploration of a great potential. These spaces (as well as other preserved public lands) have the power to awaken imaginations, take us into the past and lead us to rejoice in the future. They are havens of discovery and wonder. But, if you talk to a child, amazingly, sometimes you meet those who haven’t been there. Those who see the mountains around them and have never climbed a rock, spotted a lizard or chased squirrel on a trail. Some don’t know what waterfalls feel like or silent nights under New Mexico stars smell like. You don’t have to be a Boy Scout or a Girl Scout to go for a walk in a wild place. You don’t have to be a hiker or camper to smell the desert rain or the pine forest. New Mexico has more than 18 areas under the National Park Service purview and more than 1,714,700 visitors journey through them yearly. We need to continue to support them, take our children to visit them and provide the means to keep them functioning and safe for Americans and other visitors. My favorite place in the world is right here in southern New Mexico and under the National Parks Service, White Sands National Monument. My children have spent many hours cavorting there. I have floated above in a hotair balloon, been buried to my neck, slid and rolled down dunes and walked many miles at the park. Other parks here that I have wandered in and been amazed at include Bandelier, Carlsbad Caverns, Chaco Culture and the Gila Cliff Dwellings. The Salinas Pueblo Missions have taken me

An eclipse of the sun happens at the White Sands Balloon Invitational Sunday, Sept. 18 as wind conditions make for a late start over the sands at White Sands National Monument during the White Sands Balloon Invitational. dent Woodrow Wilson, is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wildlife therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.” An NPR series on the National Parks identified the four biggest challenges facing the National Park Service and its future. The four are climate change, overcrowding, financing and relevancy. NPR reporter Nathan Rott found during his investigation that, while there is no shortage of visitors at the parks, the demographics are a bit disturbing. In a survey of visitors at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the average age was 41 years old and most of the visitors were white. These statistics are very similar to the overall demographics of the park systems. And, while the National Park Service has been making increasing a priority, most of its workforce and visitors are white. Cassius Cash is the first African-American superintendent in Great Smoky’s history and one of

National parks contain ... •At least 247 species of threatened or endangered plants and animals. •More than 75,000 archeological sites. Nearly 27,000 historic and prehistoric structures. •More than 167 million museum items, including George Washington’s inaugural coat and poet Carl Sandburg’s typewriter. •18,000 miles of trails. •The world’s largest carnivore, the Alaskan brown bear. •The world’s largest living things, Giant Sequoia trees.

into lonely and contested places of rich history. Valles Caldera sweeps me into an even more distant and prehistoric past, bringing up butterflies in my stomach every time I swing over the mountain into the vast caldera. If New Mexico’s National Parks are any indication, I want to hit every one of the more than 400 locations across the country. Imagine what I could learn, I can’t conceive of all I would

•The highest point in North America, Mt. McKinley (20,320 feet), in Denali National Park. •The longest cave system known to the world, Mammoth Cave National Park, with more than 400 mapped miles of caves. •America’s deepest lake, Crater Lake in Crater Lake National Park, at 1,943 feet. •The lowest point in the Western Hemisphere, Badwater Basin in Death Valley National Park, at 282’ below sea level. Source: www.nmp.gov

learn. I have felt the spray of Yellowstone’s Old Faithful on my face. What’s next? Numerous problems face the national parks today, from human encroachment to a serious lack of funding at the nation’s capital. Consequently the battle against vandalism, disintegrating infrastructure and demographic inequality is falling behind. The mission statement of the National Park Service, as signed into law Aug. 25, 1916 by Presi-

only a handful in the service. “This is the most diverse generation this country has seen,” Cash told NPR. “If these kids have no connection to the natural world, what message are we sending 15 years from now?” In regard to climate change, Rott said, while part of the Park Service’s mandate is to preserve the places and the wildlife ecosystems in them for future generations, the glaciers in Glacier National Park are melting and Joshua tree habitat is shrinking because of higher temperatures in Joshua Tree National Park. “It goes on and on,” Rott said. “John Jarvis, the director of the National Park Service, put it to me this way, ‘Essentially, the paradigm upon which we manage is being shifted. And we have to begin thinking about how we manage for multiple features.’” Overcrowding and financing are linked, Rott said. The National Park Service has not been able to pay its bills for a long time, racking up more than $12 billion in deferred maintenance. “Those are roads that need to be fixed and buildings that need repairs, even — in some cases, it’s entire sewer systems that need repaired, but the money just isn’t there,” he said. “And it doesn’t seem like Congress is going to give them any more anytime soon.”

Elva K. Österreich is editor of Desert Exposure and delighted to be holding office hours in Silver City on the second Wednesday of the month (Oct. 12) from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House. Please drop by and say hello.

Postcards From the Edge Desert Exposure Travels

#4

The following is a simple substitution cipher; one letter stands for another. Solution is by trial and error. Solution will appear in next month’s Desert Exposure. Send full solution, or just the Secret Words, to nmsrdave@swcp.com, and be recognized! TIPS:www.nmsr.org/secretword.htm and www.nmsr.org/cypher-how2.jpg

Clue:E = K, Q = U

"ABN MCFK OCWNO CR PLN PV ABN FKRA OCWNOR ABKA BKRL'A KFONKJG YNNL AKENL PWNO YG AKZKOCRE, RP CA'R CZUPOAKLA AP

While on vacation visiting friends in Ocean Shores, Washington, Silver City resident Raymon Wier paused for a shot with Desert Exposure. If you are traveling, don’t forget to share, do the selfie thing with yourself holding a copy of Desert Exposure and send it it to diary@desertexposure.com or stick it in the mail to: Desert Exposure, 1740-A Calle de Mercado, Las Cruces, NM 88005.

MNA OCJ PV CA LPX." - APJJ RDBQFEN Use the answer key below to track your clues, and reveal Secret Words! A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

Previous Solution: "FEARS OF BIG BROTHER BEAMING DANGEROUS RADIATION INTO YOUR HOME FOR NEFARIOUS PURPOSES ARE NOT REASONS [TO BE ALARMED BY SMART METERS]." - BRIAN DOLTON, LAS CRUCES Secret Words*:NO DUMP REALITY

U

V

W

X

Y

Z

Congrats to #3 solvers Will Adams*, Mike Arms*, Christina McAlexander* & Vivian McAlexander*!


8 • OCTOBER 2016

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DESERT DIARY

Having a Questionable Time YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT YOU MIGHT GET Henry Duchene took his dad to a restaurant. The last time I took my elderly father to a restaurant, we had the misfortune of getting a new waitress on her first day of training. The poor girl got BOTH of our orders wrong, even though we ordered the same thing. But she tried, I’ll give her that. Instead of hamburger steaks,

we got hamburgers. Instead of mashed potatoes, we got fries. Instead of coffee, we got diet colas. At the end of the meal, the flustered waitress smiled and asked if we would like dessert. My father perused the dessert menu for a second, and then asked her, “Now... what do I have to order to get some cherry pie?”

LIFE IS CONFUSING Bobby Cowbones has a lot of

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Why the sun lightens our hair, but darkens our skin? Why don’t you ever see the headline ‘Psychic Wins Lottery’? Why is “abbreviated” such a long word? Why is it that doctors and attorneys call what they do ‘practice’? Why is lemon juice made with artificial flavoring, and dish washing liquid made with real lemons? Why is the man who invests all your money called a broker? Why is the time of day with the slowest traffic called rush hour? Why isn’t there mouse-flavored cat food? Why didn’t Noah swat those two mosquitoes? Why do they sterilize the needle for lethal injections? You know that indestructible black box that is used on airplanes? Why don’t they make the whole plane out of that same stuff? Why don’t sheep shrink when it rains? Why are they called apartments when they are all stuck together? If flying is so safe, why do they call the airport the terminal?

Mrs. Cowbones has some questions too. Yesterday my daughter emailed me again, asking why I didn’t do something useful with my time. “Like sitting around the pool and drinking wine is not a good thing?” I asked. Talking about my “doing-something-useful” seems to be her favorite topic of conversation. She was “only thinking of me,” she said and suggested that I go down to the Senior Center and hang out with the guys. I did this and when I got home last night, I decided to play a prank on her. I emailed her and told her that I had joined a Parachute Club. She replied, “Are you nuts? You are 78 years old and now you’re going to start jumping out of airplanes?” I told her that I even got a Membership Card and emailed a copy to her. She immediately telephoned me and yelled, “Good grief, Mom, where are your glasses?! This is a Membership to a Prostitute Club, not a Parachute Club.” “Oh man, I’m in trouble again,” I said, “I really don’t know what to do. I signed up for five jumps a week.” The line went quiet and her friend picked up the phone and said that my daughter had fainted. Life as a Senior Citizen is not getting any easier, but sometimes it can be fun.

TOO MUCH TIME TO PONDER AllTimeNutella has some more of life’s little questions. What happens when you get “scared half to death” twice? Is it true cannibals don’t eat clowns because they taste funny? If all the world’s a stage, where does the audience sit? It it’s tourist season why can’t

we shoot them? Why are the alphabets in the order that they are? Is it because it’s a song? If you write a book about failure, and it doesn’t sell, is it called success? If work is so terrific, how come you get paid for it? If one synchronized swimmer drowns, do the others drown too? Are the good things that come to people who wait, the leftovers of people who went before them? Why did Yankee Doodle name the feather in his hat Macaroni? If electricity comes from electrons, does morality comes from morons? Why is Greenland called Greenland, when it’s white and covered with ice? Why is the word for “a fear of long words,” hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia, so long? Why does someone believe you when you say there are four billion stars, but check when you say the paint is wet? What if Batman gets bitten by a vampire? Did the Mayans get bored after reaching 2012 or is the predication for real? Can we spell creativity however we want? Do infants enjoy infancy as much as adults enjoy adultery? Where are all the mentally handicapped parking spaces for people like me? Has your mate ever called you at work to ask where the remote control is? Was the person who invented the Express Lane at the grocery store properly thanked? Why don’t you ever see ads for advertising companies? Why is it that when things get wet they get darker, even though water is clear? If a fork were made of gold would it still be considered silverware? Why isn’t chocolate considered a vegetable, if chocolate comes from cocoa beans, and all beans are a vegetable?

IF SOMETHING “GOES WITHOUT SAYING,” WHY DO PEOPLE STILL SAY IT? You know the expression, “Don’t quit your day job?” Well what do you say to people that work nights? Why do all the superheroes wear underpants on the outside? If the president were gay, would his husband be the first man? If you were a genie and a person asked you this wish, “I wish you would not grant me this wish” what would you do? Did Noah have woodpeckers on the ark? If he did, where did he keep them? Why don’t the hairs on your arms get split ends? Do pyromaniacs wear blazers? If you don’t pay your exorcist, do you get repossessed? When something is funny why is it called a “knee-slapper” when you actually slap your thigh?


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 9

FACES AND PLACES

Some faces glare from the 2015 Halloween on Granado Street event. (Photos by Elva K. Österreich)

Halloween on Granado Street

Treats, tricks and music part of Tularosa event

P

et parades, Jack-o-lantern contests, treats and tricks are all common sights around Halloween. In Tularosa, all those things come together in October in one place, along with music, food and art. The Tularosa Arts and History Council (TAHC) is organizing “Halloween on Granado Street 2016.” This is the second year for this community event and it will take place from 4 to 9 p.m., Oct. 29 on Tularosa’s historic Granado Street. There is no admission charge and there will be a variety of free games for kids, trick-or-treating at Granado St. businesses, a “trunk-or-treat” area, a Jack-olantern contest, a pet parade and costume contests for all ages. Food vendors, merchants, artists, non-profit booths and The Grill 49 restaurant will all be open for business and entertainment. For the 2015 inaugural year, the organizers of “Halloween on Granado Street” thought they might draw 300 to 500 local participants. Estimates of the actual attendance were around 1,000 and people came from all around the Tularosa Basin. This year’s event promises to be just as well attended. Originally, the event was hosted by the Greater Tularosa Foundation (GTF) as a fund-raising event for its projects. The GTF is working to create a public plaza and has worked alongside the Village of Tularosa and other organizations to facilitate the creation of a visitor center and to assist in the renovation of Tularosa’s historic main street – Granado Street. The Tularosa Arts and History Council was formed with a vision to support similar efforts but expand beyond Granado Street as well.

If You Go What: Halloween on Granado Street When: Oct. 29, 4-9 p.m. Where: Granado Street, Tularosa, N.M. Why: Fun! Contact: Jennifer Gruger, 505-710-2024 “The TAHC mission statement is to increase awareness about the rich history and talented artists in and around the Village of Tularosa through events that support art, history and culture, thereby drawing businesses and visitors to Granado Street and surrounding areas,” said TAHC President Jennifer Gruger. “Specific focus to include youthful artists interested in developing art and finding ways to encourage the passage of history and the culture of Tularosa from one generation to the next through the telling of life stories.” Gruger said most of the people who live in Tularosa (population just under 3,000) have lived there for their entire lives and have generations of stories to tell. While there are books, photographs and of course online resources, the history of Tularosa lives largely inside the memories of these residents. TAHC hopes to provide an avenue to get this culture captured and marketed to the rest of the state and beyond. Proceeds from this event will go to hosting future events on Granado Street, supporting community based projects including youthful artist projects and marketing efforts to draw businesses to the Village of Tularosa. For information contact Gruger at 505-710-2924 or jengruger@gmail.com.

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FIESTA Y MÁS

Silver City Event Welcoming Vendors Time for tamal makers, others to sign up

T

he Sixth Annual Tamal Fiesta y Más is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 3, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. on Bullard at Eighth Street in historic downtown Silver City. This year’s event includes huachas and other games, performances by Western New Mexico’s Mariachi Plata and Deming Schools Folklorico Dancers, a

new Disco Cook-off, and much more. Previous years’ food and arts-and-crafts vendors have come from throughout the region, many from within Grant County but also from as far away as El Paso, Palomas and Nogales. The deadline for vendor applications is Nov. 3. Family recipes are welcome, whether with red green chile,

Venders are welcomed to register to take part in the Tamal Fiesta y Más scheduled for Dec. 3. (Courtesy Photo) cos are often handed down in families through generations. Vendor Applications and additional information are available at www.TamalFIesaYMas.org, by email at TamalFiesta@gmail.com or phone at 505-819-9651 or 575538-1337. Tamal Fiesta y Más is hosted

by the Southwest New Mexico Green Chamber of Commerce. Community partners include the Town of Silver City, Nuevos Comienzos Community Kitchen, Western New Mexico University, and other organizations. Thanks to Griffin’s Propane for sponsorship.

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with meat or without, spicy or dulce, wrapped in corn husks or banana leaves. Last year, vendors sold a total of 16,500 tamales. Other foods reflecting Hispanic heritage are also welcome. Past vendors have made and sold empanadas, biscochos, menudo, posole, jams and jellies, salsa, capirotada, albondigas, fish tacos, chile ristras and more. Hispanic heritage celebrated in the form of arts and crafts is also welcome. Past vendors have sold hand-made jewelry, weavings, clothing, paintings, greeting cards, wood work, metal work, hand-made dolls and other toys, pottery, talavera tiles, Christmas ornaments and many other items. New this year, cooks are invited to participate in the Disco Cookoff, featuring carnitas and other foods prepared on large metal disks. This contest offers cash prizes. Originally fashioned from traditional farm implements, dis-

A

t Our Lady of Guadalupe Benedictine Monastery in Silver City, the monks go about their days in silence, sometimes as long as eight months with nary a word spoken as they tend their gardens of beans, which they dry and grind into coffee and sell to earn the monastery upkeep funds. In the 73 rows of Rio Grande Winery’s vineyard in Las Cruces, cutting clusters of grapes off the vine with miniature scythes called rooster-tails, they speak with ease. “This makes me feel like I’m in the Amazon jungle,” said one. “You ever been in the Amazon, Brother?” “I make it down there pretty regularly,” said another. Aug. 16 was the monks’ first day at the winery for 2016 and for the rest of the harvest season, which could extend to October, the monks will come here twice a week and work for 12 to 16 hours a day. Harvesting grapes is not an activity typical of a monastery, but this is the second year the monks of Our Lady of Guadalupe have done so. “Last year what happened is we got hit with two hailstorms backto-back and it just devastated everything,” said proprietor Gordon Steel. The 2015 hail damaged many of the grapes on the vine but not entire clusters. Despite this, both Steel and his partner, Bob McCaslin, a retired agronomy professor at New Mexico State University, decided to abandon the damaged crop. Mixing damaged grapes with intact grapes taints the flavor of the wine, said McCaslin, and cleaning the clusters of the damaged grapes would have required “a small

A monk removing a cluster of grapes with a rooster’s tail. army,” said Steel. Upon hearing this, the monastery’s Father Prior contacted Steel after hearing about the lost harvest. “And (Prior) said, ‘What kind of army are we talking about?’” Steel said. “I said, ‘It’d take 30, 40 people.’ And he said, ‘Keep talking.’” Prior offered Steel the labor of the monastery’s monks in harvesting the damaged crop. In exchange, Steel offered to make the monastery’s sacramental wine. Before seeing the harvested crops, Steel said he was skeptical as to whether the grapes would produce good wine. After the grapes were harvested, Steel and McCaslin looked them over in the collection bins. “They were the most beautiful grapes that we’ve ever processed,” Steel said. “(The monks) cleaned every bad little berry off.” Steel said even the winery’s regular harvesters do not harvest such clean crop. Steel used the majority of the harvest to make the monastery’s dark rosé and white wines, which he said turned out very well de-

spite his initial misgivings as to the harvest’s quality. This year the monks returned and work under the same conditions. On their first day, they picked nearly 7,000 pounds of grapes in less than eight hours, which Steel processed in less than an hour to begin the fermentation process for making cabernet sauvignon. Steel worked as a nurse in the military for 34 years before retiring in 2009 to focus on the winery, which he first saw in the 1980s and finally bought in the ‘90s. He planted the first grapes in 2005 and harvested for the first time in 2007. He’s envisioned owning his own winery since he was young, he said. His father, a Hatch doctor, made his own wine in the Steel family’s vineyards, which date back to the 1800s. The winery is open Friday through Sunday noon to 5:30 p.m. and groups can make appointments on Mondays and Thursdays at 575-524-3985. More information, including ordering wine for home delivery, can be found at riograndewinery.com.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 11

Rising With the Sun at White Sands Balloon Invitational

A morning on the dunes at White Sands National Monument Sept. 17 and 18 made for plenty of photo ops, playing in the sand and hot air balloon observation during White Sands International Balloon Invitational.

White Sands Balloon Invitational participants and attendees spread over the area and enjoy a cool morning on the sands Sunday Sept. 18. The event, taking place over the weekend, drew more than 2,000 people each day to White Sands National Monument. (Photos by Elva K. Österreich) The Energy Robot poses and dances under the Touchstone Energy balloon at the White Sands Balloon Invitational Sunday at White Sands National Monument.

Smokey Bear gets in some hops across the dunes despite some wind challenges at the White Sands Balloon Invitational Sept. 18.

ar Yo u ng P N

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Paleontologist Visits for Talk Morgan to discuss late Cenozoic vertebrates

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outhwest New Mexico Audubon and the Western Institute of Lifelong Learning are cohosting a talk by Dr. Gary S. Morgan, Curator of Paleontology at New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science entitled “Late Cenozoic Vertebrate Fossils from the Gila Region of Southwestern New Mexico.” Morgan’s primary area of interest is fossil mammals from the younger half of the Cenozoic Era, about the last 35 million years of geologic time. In addition to the Gila Region, he also has ongoing projects in New Mexico on Pliocene (2-5 million years old) vertebrates from

the Rio Grande Valley south of Las Cruces; extinct free-tailed bats from medial Pleistocene (200,000 years old) cave deposits in Slaughter Canyon Cave in Carlsbad Caverns National Park, and fossil vertebrates associated with Paleoindian artifacts from late Pleistocene deposits (11-12,000 years old) in Sandia Cave in the Sandia Mountains near Albuquerque. He is also involved in two international paleontology projects, early Miocene fossils (20 million years old) from Panama uncovered during the ongoing widening of the Panama Canal and Late Quaternary fossils (about 5-10,000 years old)

from underwater caves in the Bahamas. Dr. Morgan’s talk will cover his findings in the Gila Region of Catron and Grant counties of southwestern New Mexico as well as the other projects he is currently involved in. The meeting will be held at 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 7 in Western New Mexico University’s Global Resource Center, on the corner of 12th and Kentucky streets in Silver City. Light refreshments will be available after the meeting, all are welcome to attend. For information call 575-388-2386 or on the web at www.swnmaudubon. org.

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The mammoth jaw Morgan and his team dug up after being prepared for display. (Courtesy Photo)


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 13

WATER FEST • BILLY HUNTSMAN

Fifth Graders Learn About the Gila Alliance works on educational, fun programs

S

ilver City fifth-graders recently participated in a day of learning about the Gila River at the Nature Conservancy’s Gila Farm in Cliff, New Mexico. The Children’s Water Festival took place on Tuesday, Sept. 13, and was cosponsored by the Upper Gila Watershed Alliance (UGWA). “The Children’s Water Festival was first put on in 2003 and sponsored by the Environmental Protection Agency and the New Mexico Environment Department,” said Patrice Mutchnick, co-organizer of the festival. Mutchnick is also executor of the Ella Jaz Kirk Water Conservation Fund, which supports projects that educate the public about Southwest rivers and watersheds. The fund is named after Ella Myers, Ella Kirk (Mutchnick’s daughter) and Michael Mahl, high school students who taught the history of the Gila River at the 2014 water festival. Myers, Kirk and Mahl died in May 2014 in a plane crash. “They loved the water festival and they knew how important it was to educate our children and they wanted to pass this education and information about the river to other children and adults as well,” said Carol Fugagli, an UGWA staff member and other co-organizer of the festival. Mutchnick said, in the 13 years the water festival has taken place, the focus has shifted from general water quality concerns and education to river conservation and an ecological emphasis on rivers and watersheds. The festival on Sept. 13 was the final component of UGWA’s three-pronged approach to Gila education. “The first phase was to get education material sent out to all the teachers (in Silver City) talking about the different aspects of the river,” said Fugagli. UGWA consulted Tricia Martinez, associate superintendent of learning services at Silver Consolidated Schools, to align the educational materials it distributed to the public schools of Silver City with the New Mexico Common Core State Standards, Fugagli said. The second phase entailed festival organizers going into the

The festival this year designed commemorative plaques to be attached to wooden benches along the riverside. Ella Kirk, Michael Mahl and Ella Myers were passionate about Gila River education and had taught at the 2014 Children’s Water Festival. All three died in a plane crash in 2014.

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Two elementary-school girls bring in a net full of small river life to drop into a bucket for the other students to examine. fifth-grade classrooms to give presentations on the Gila. “We introduced different vocabulary terms: watershed, filtration, erosion, continental divide, meander,” said Fugagli. “And then there was a skit the kids put on where they took the role of animals that live in the river’s ecosystem.” Such animals include the black hawk, the beaver, the river otter and the Gila River trout. At the water festival itself, there were six learning stations. One taught how Native Americans historically used the Gila and its surrounding ecosystem. The students worked with adobe and clay and also made bracelets out of yucca flowers. “I had a lot fun,” said Asa, a third grader at Guadalupe Montessori school. “My favorite part was making these bracelets.” Another taught bird migration and allowed the students to interact with various birds by catching and releasing them. “My favorite part was the bird migration,” said Maya, a fifth grader at Guadalupe. “We got to play a game where we wore signs (saying which bird we were) and we had to migrate without hitting obstacles.” Another station taught how a river is formed and grows throughout its lifetime. At this station, the students created smaller rivers within the river. “I had a lot, a lot of fun. My fa-

vorite part was probably going to make the river,” said Violet, a third grader at Guadalupe. The fourth station had students comparing and contrasting the skulls of carnivores, herbivores and omnivores, which have different skull structures because of their diets. At the fifth station, the students toured a garden of flowers and learned about pollination and pollinators. At the last station, the students got into the water and caught macroinvertebrates—animals with backbones that can been see with the naked eye— and tested the quality of the water. It also gave the students the opportunity to swim. “It was really fun, especially the swimming part,” said Eleo, a third grader at Guadalupe. Fugagli said the festival is important because it gives students the opportunity to interact with the river. Despite the river’s proximity to Silver City, many students have never been to it, she said. Fugagli said she hopes students come away from the festival with a love for the river. “If you don’t love it, then why would you want to protect it?” she said. Currently the festival happens with Silver City schools, but UGWA will seek grants in the next year to include other school districts in the future.

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Students gather at the riverside as one girl cups a small frog in her hands Sept. 13 at the Children’s River Festival.

Third-, fourth- and fifth-graders from Silver City participated in a day of learning about the Gila River ecosystem. (Photos by Billy Huntsman)

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CHANGING SPACES • JOAN E. PRICE

Time is a Circle

Getting into the mind of the ancients, agencies protecting them

T

here are three things archaeologists look at: the road, artifacts of cultures of centuries ago and generations still living today. DMG Four Corners Research, Inc., an archaeological firm, has contributed detailed reports, large and small, to more than 230 clients. They have collected a wealth of findings of ancient occupations high on slopes of mountains or hugging dry river beds, military battles and old ranching structures — historic and prehistoric timelines — throughout the American Southwest. Several Four Corners employees live in Las Cruces and the company offers extensive services in cultural resource management, a field that has taken on big but often quiet dimensions in the Tularosa Basin. After decades of driving to and from distant project sites, digging for clues of ancient life ways among pottery sherds, stone tools, beads, plant remains and bagging them for analysis back at the office in Tularosa, the family-owned business is now settling into Las Cruces. Las Cruces provides better access to banking, printing resources and supplies and face-toface work with clients. Research facilities are close at hand. There will be a slight change in faces — company founders Dawn and David Greenwald, are passing the small business with the big impact to their son, Justin Greenwald, in the professional field since 1991, and to Lindsay Poitevint, a supervisory archaeologist with Four Corners. Justin is following closely in his parents footsteps. “He built a subterranean pit house in our back yard when he was in fifth grade and was working with David like a tadpole,” Dawn said. Justin is also proficient in contemporary high tech devices like Trimble GEO XT and Garmin GPS site mapping and navigation, in-field historic and lithic artifact analysis, photography, and ArcView drafting/mapping. Poitevint has close professional ties to Las Cruces; she has worked with New Mexico State University, the Bureau of Land Management, Gila National Forest and Fort Bliss Military Reservation. She also served as a crew chief on a recent 50,000-acre survey at White Sands Missile Range. “Justin and Lindsey are steady and they have seen the best and the worst of stresses from both a business and field perspective,” Dawn said. Dawn met David Greenwald in 1979 at the Dolores Archaeological Program for the University of Colorado. They married and made their way to Flagstaff where David became closely involved in the excavation of the

Lindsey Poitevint, Justin Greenwald, and his father David Greenwald, retired archaeology supervisor of DMG Four Corners Research, Inc., collaborate on their ideas about a stone palette for paints used at a prehistoric site in the Tularosa Basin they have been working at to produce an in-depth report about their findings.

Dawn M. Greenwald, a specialist in lithic analysis and retired president of DMG Four Corners Research, Inc., examines a river stone for several subtle features that would reveal possible use in human hands centuries ago. (Photos by Joan E. Price) huge Hohokam civilization and canal system across the Phoenix Basin that is now the Sky Harbor in Phoenix. The findings there were a training ground for much of his future work — cultural resource management that is exacting and required by law when federal dollars are used for a public building. Dawn, her husband called away on the Phoenix project, juggled her expertise in lithic analysis with raising Justin. She was a ranch hand caring for their horses, getting a Masters in Archaeology at night at Northern Arizona State, and working fulltime with a large environmental firm in Flagstaff — and then Jacob, their second son, was born. “Archaeologists work outdoors in sometime harsh weather; they respect each other and work closely together at the field schools,” Dawn said. “Often a close camaraderie develops.” Dawn and David wanted to move away from “the corporate business” and create “a family working together” while retaining local expertise and keeping the business small scale where

“we all wear different hats at different times.” They have directed, supervised and trained interns; brought in colleagues on many projects; and driven long distances to and from sites until the work moves indoors, using computer programs, editing and producing reports with the office staff. Since 2001, Dawn learned to do business, accounting and consulting with legal specialists and government agencies in order to build up a good solid reputation with a special attention to employee relationships. David served as director of research at DMG Four Corners Research since 1999. It is an exacting and intensive project by project freelance effort of submitting competitive bids, recruiting additional employees to working under sometimes harsh weather conditions to turning in well done professional reports informed by decades of field experience and keeping up with the requirements of federal and state project work benefits. Their retirement will be a smooth transition to Poitevint and Justin Greenwald — they have been working together for years. Justin went on field trips since he was a boy with his father — Lindsey and Dawn have been reviewing the business angles and, still, the two new officials will wear different hats when necessary. The DMG legacy provides the most current knowledge possible coaxed from a landscape with a hint of vital water management in remote locations or under urbanized road, highways or buildings where prehistoric people carefully crafted everything from homes to communal structures that often had religious functions, how the construction was accomplished and how foods were harvested and stored leading to more questions about distant landscapes explored by foot in all kinds of climate regimes over hundreds of years.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 15

ARTS EXPOSURE

Arts Scene

Upcoming area art happenings Photographs by Storm Sermay featured at the Branigan Cultural Center bring the jobs of working women to life in black and white.

The Coper Quail Gallery celebrates color with an exhibit featuring a variety of artists for October.

Copper Quail Gallery celebrates the excitement and diversity of color in a new collection of multi-media pieces. “Oh for Color’s Sake!” is a group show by the gallery’s local artists, who explore the focus of color in clay, paint, glass, metal, wood, paper, fabric, and stone. The show runs from Oct. 4 through Oct. 30. An opening reception with light refreshments is from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 8. The Copper Quail can be found at 211A N. Texas St. in Silver City.

Oct. 28 and 29 the Deming Arts Center features the Guatemalan Mercado, open for purchases of textiles, jewelry and other delights from Guatemala.

Deming The October Show at the Deming Art Center is the annual Black Range Artist Exhibition. The artists show paintings, sculptures and works in other media. The show will be judged by Bob Diven, a painter and sculptor living in Las Cruces. A reception will be from 1-3 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 2. The gallery is located at 100 S. Gold. The show will run from Oct. 2 to 27. Also, in October is the Guatemalan Mercado at the Deming Arts Center where people can shop for unique gifts, clothing, jewelry and more. The Mercado is from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28 and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 29. For more information visit www.demingarts.org or call 575-546-3663. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday with extended hours on Thursday evenings till 6:30 p.m. For more information call 575-546-3663, or visit www.demingarts.org.

Las Cruces Mas Art features an Eva Gabriella Flynn Show entitled “Disfigures.” Flynn is a student at New Mexico State University pursuing her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. She often likes to combine realistic figures in abstract scenarios to create a narrative within paintings. Exhibition opening night is from 5-7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 7 at 126 S. Main Street, Las Cruces. For information call 575The work of Eva Gabri526-9113 or visit ella Flynn is featured at www.masartllc. Mas Art in Las Cruces com. for October.

“Women at Work,” “38 Views of Baylor Canyon” and “Wireless Wizardry” are currently on display at the Branigan Cultural Center. “Women at Work,” featuring the work of photographer Storm Sermay, will be on display through Saturday, Oct. 15. Women at Work is comprised of black and white photographs that Sermay captured during her travels to Ecuador, Mexico, and Cuba. “36 Views of Baylor Canyon,” featuring the artwork of Thom Sawyer, are on display through Saturday, Oct. 22. The show is comprised of selections from a series of graphite and color pencil drawings of Baylor Canyon, located east of Las Cruces in the Organ Mountains. “Wireless Wizardry: A History of Radio in the Mesilla Valley” is on display through Oct. 12. This exhibit celebrates the unique history of wireless radio in the Mesilla Valley with vintage and modern radio equipment, including transmitters, receivers, ham radios and antennas. Admission is free to the Branigan Cultural Center, located at 501 North Main Street. The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday. For information, visit the website at museums.las-cruces.org or call 575-541-2154. The current exhibition at the Las Cruces Museum of Art is “Nature, Tradition, and Innovation: Contemporary Japanese Ceramics from the Gordon Brodfuehrer Collection” and continues through Oct. 15. The museum is located at 491 N. Main Street and open from 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Thursday and Saturday. For information, visit museums. las-cruces.org or call 575-541-2137.

Blackwell’s Antiques & Gifts

For the finer things in life... COME SEE US!

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Silver City

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MONDAY-SAT. 10:30-5 • SUNDAY 12-4 575-388-1737 • 218 N. BULLARD HISTORIC DOWNTOWN SILVER CITY, NEW MEXICO

Punkie Garretson, Owner

VICTORIA CHICK COWTRAIL ART STUDIO

Frank Rimbach’s landscapes also grace the Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery in October.

Artist Nanci Bissell creates mind-scapes and seascapes and is featured at the Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery this month.

The Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery located at 2470-A Calle de Guadalupe, Mesilla across from the Fountain Theatre, features artists Nanci Bissell and Frank Rimbach for October. Bissell has been an educator, teacher, principal, and assistance principal in the elementary schools, retiring after 26 years in the school business. Rimbach has studied both old and modern masters in Europe and the United States. His work is primarily in landscapes, bookcase series and his modern abstracts. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Sunday. For information, call 575522-2933 or visit www.mesillavalleyfinearts.com.

ART SCENE

continued on page 16

#29 in the RED DOT ART GUIDE

OPEN ALL DAYS OF RED DOT ART ARTFEST www.victoriachick.com


16 • OCTOBER 2016

Oh For

www.desertexposure.com

CO r’sa VIBRANT Sake! group show of DIVERSE MEDIA

RECEPTION: Oct. 8 3-7pm with light refreshments SHOW DATES: Oct. 4-30

Copper Quail Gallery

211 A N. Texas-Corner of Texas and Yankie in Silver City • OPEN Tuesday – Sunday 11–4 • 575-388-2646

Art & 2 0 1Art5 & Fine

SH

Crafts Show

Las Artistas NO November 19 & 20 Chelsea Stone

“Big City Dreams,” by Laurie Baker.

ARTS EXPOSURE

Seeking Imperfection

The EPIC Railyard Center at 2201 E. Mills Ave, El Paso,

• OVER 90 JURIED ARTISTS • EMERGING ARTISTS SECTION • DEMONSTRATIONS Candy Mayer Maria Navarra Pino • CHILDREN’S ART EXHIBITION •FREE FOOD TRUCK • VALETCircus PARKING OVER 90 JURIED ARTISTS for $ d a A s d mi sithi • FREE VALET PARKING EMERGING ARTISTS SECTION FREEns iNDFgORoKnID$S6 r B U DEMONSTRATIONS ER 18 ) 8 1 BRIN CHILDREN’S ART EXHIBITION FOR $G1 THIS AD nder u .0 n ADMIS 0 OFF FOOD TRUCK Circus ildre SION h c r o FREE VALET PARKING ree f

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The 2016 Las Artistas Fine Art & Crafts Show has been made possible, in part, with the Support of City of El Paso Museums and Cultural Affairs and the Texas Commission on the Arts.

www.lasartistas.org

T dd Sh lb

C li C t

Get Ready for the RED DOT ArtFest OCT. 7 - 16, 2016

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he show at Alamogordo’s Creative Designs Custom Framing & Gallery for October features “Artistic Grunge,” an artsy style running through Laurie Baker’s art. It represents how real life looks; not as a pretty painting, but with life’s dirt, grime and imperfections. Baker is a digital photo artist who began by using a computer in the early 1990’s for its primary function, communication. Because of her love of photography, art and design she soon

started experimenting with digital graphics which lead to her desire to produce art and share it with others. She doesn’t seek to shoot that “perfect photograph,” “It’s probably already been done by someone somewhere anyway,” Baker said. Her goal is to take that photo, combine it with textures, typography and other graphics to produce a composite that feels more realistic, more organic. Her inspiration comes from urban decay,

architecture, animals, flowers, pods and weeds. Baker describes her art as moody, dreamy, whimsical, surrealistic and often fun. Laurie has been published in “Living the Photo Artistic Life” volumes 1-17, issuu, Inc. The gallery is located at 917 New York Ave. in Alamogordo. For information call 575-4344420. A reception for Baker’s exhibit takes place from 6 to 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 21.

a career in art. She mainly paints in oils and has won several awards while exhibited in local and regional galleries and museums. Every month the Doña Ana Arts Council welcomes local

artists to exhibit in the El Paso Electric Gallery in the lobby of the Rio Grande Theatre. Regular exhibit hours are 9 a.m. – 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. For more information, or to book an exhibit, call the Arts Council offices during regular working hours. The art show at the New Mexico Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum in Las Cruces brings viewers close up to some of history’s most iconic Native American leaders. Santa Fe artist Narrie Toole’s paintings pay tribute to Native American culture, spirituality and leadership. The 16 oil paintings – some on canvas and some on linen – are large, several of them 36 inches by 60 inches. They are bold and intense. The show will be in the Museum’s Arts Corridor through Dec. 4. For information, call 575-522-4100. The Museum is located at 4100 Dripping Springs Road in Las Cruces.

ART SCENE

continued from page 15 El Paso Electric Gallery, located in the lobby of the Rio Grande Theatre features Linda Hagan for October. Hagan moved to Las Cruces from Ohio in 2004 to pursue her calling for

"Make Art, Not War" detail of installation by Lois Duffy 211-C N. Texas St., Silver City www.loisduffy.com 575-313-9631 Studio open to the public Saturdays from 10 to 4pm or by calling 575-313-9631

OPEN EVERY DAY FROM OCT. 7 THROUGH 16

Washington artist Thom Sawyer’s views of Baylor Canyon are part of the October offering at the Branigan Cultural Center.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 17

ARTS EXPOSURE

Gallery Guide Wind Canyon Studio, 11 Quail Run off Hwy. 180 mile marker 107, 5742308, 619-933-8034. Louise Sackett. Monday and Wednesday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. and by appointment. Wynnegate Gallery & Studio, 1105 W. Market St., (214) 957-3688. Monday and Thursday to Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sunday 11:45 a.m.-4 p.m., Tuesday and Wednesday by appointment. Yankie St. Artist Studios, 103 W. Yankie St., 519-0615. By appointment. Zoe’s Gallery, 305 N. Cooper St., 6544910.

Pinos Altos

Pinos Altos Art Gallery-Hearst Church Gallery, 14 Golden Ave. Pinos Altos, 574-2831. Open late-April to early October. Friday, Saturday, Sunday and holidays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Mimbres

Chamomile Connection, 3918 Highway 35N, 536-9845. Lynnae McConaha. By appointment. Kate Brown Pottery and Tile, HC 15 Box 1335, San Lorenzo, 5369935, katebrown@gilanet.com, www.katebrownpottery.com. By appointment. Narrie Toole, Estudio de La Montura, 313-7390, www.narrietoole.com. Contemporary western oils, giclées and art prints. By appointment.

Bayard

Kathryn Allen Clay Studio, 601 Erie St., 537-3332. By appointment.

Cliff

Gila River Artisans Gallery, 8409 Hwy. 180. Eclectic collection of local artists. Friday to Sunday 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

Northern Grant County & Catron County

Casitas de Gila, 50 Casita Flats Road, Gila, 535-4455. Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or by appointment. gallery@casitasdegila. com, www.galleryatthecasitas.com.

Mesilla

Adobe Patio Gallery, 1765 Avenida de Mercado (in the Mesilla Mercado), 532-9310. Tuesday to Saturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Galeri Azul, Old Mesilla Plaza, 5238783. Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sunday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Galeria on the Plaza, 2310 Calle de Principal, 526-9771. Daily 10 am.-6 p.m. Galería Tepín, 2220 Calle de Parian, 523-3988. Thursday to Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery, 2470 Calle de Guadalupe, 522-2933. Daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m. The Potteries, 2260 Calle de Santiago, 524-0538. Rokoko, 1785 Avenida de Mercado, 405-8877.

Las Cruces

Alegre Gallery, 920 N Alameda Blvd., 523-0685. Azure Cherry Gallery & Boutique, 330 E. Lohman Ave., 2913595. Wednesday to Thursday 12-5 p.m., Friday to Saturday, noon-8 p.m. Blue Gate Gallery, 4901 Chagar (intersection of Valley and and Taylor roads), open by calling 523-2950. Casa Blanka Home Décor & More, 1615 N. Solano, Ste. C, 575-5265272. Charles Inc., 1885 W Boutz Rd, 5231888, Monday to Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Cottonwood Gallery, 275 N. Downtown Mall (Southwest Environmental Center), 522-5552. Monday to Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Cutter Gallery, 2640 El Paseo,541-0658. Tuesday to Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Galerie Accents, 344 S. San Pedro #3, 522-3567. Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Griggs & Reymond, 504 W. Griggs Ave., 524-8450, Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Justus Wright Galeria, 266 W. Court Ave., 526-6101, jud@

delvalleprintinglc.com. Las Cruces Arts Association, Community Enterprise Center Building, 125 N. Main St. www. lacrucesarts.org. Las Cruces Museum of Art, 491 N. Main St., 541-2137. Tuesday to Friday, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.4:30 p.m. Main Street Gallery, 311 N. Downtown Mall, 647-0508. Tuesday to Friday. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Mesquite Art Gallery, 340 N. Mesquite St., 640-3502. Thursday to Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 2-5 p.m. M. Phillip’s Fine Art Gallery, 221 N. Main St., 525-1367. MVS Studios, 535 N. Main, Stull Bldg., 635-5015, www. mvsstudios.com. New Dimension Art Works, 615 E. Piñon, 373-0043. New Mexico Art, 121 Wyatt Dr., Suite 1, 525-8292/649- 4876. Wednesday 1-6 p.m., Thursday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. NMSU Art Gallery, Williams Hall, University Ave. east of Solano, 6462545. Tuesday to Sunday Nopalito’s Galeria, 326 S. Mesquite. Friday to Sunday, 8 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Ouida Touchön Studio, 1200 N. Reymond St., 635-7899. By appointment. ouida@ouidatouchon. com, www.ouidatouchon. com. Quillin Studio and Gallery, behind downtown Coas Books, 312-1064. Monday to Thursday and Saturday. Tombaugh Gallery, Unitarian Universalist Church, 2000 S. Solano, 522-7281. Wednesday to Friday 10 a.m.-2 p.m. or by appointment. Unsettled Gallery & Studio, 905 N. Mesquite, 635-2285. Virginia Maria Romero Studio, 4636 Maxim Court, 644-0214. By appointment. agzromero@zianet. com, www. virginiamariaromero.com.

CHECK OUT OUR WORKSHOPS & EVENTS

Deming

Deming Arts Center, 100 S. Gold St., 546-3663. Tuesday to Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Gold Street Gallery, 112-116 S. Gold St., 546-8200. Open Monday to Saturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Call first to be sure they are open. Orona Art Studio, 546-4650. By appointment. lyntheoilpainter@gmail. com, www.lynorona.com. Reader’s Cove Used Books & Gallery, 200 S. Copper, 544-2512. Monday to Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Photography by Daniel Gauss. Studio LeMarbe, 4025 Chaparral SE, 544-7708.

Rodeo

Chiricahua Gallery, 5 Pine St., 5572225. Open daily except Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Hillsboro

RED DOT EVENT Tour the Studio of

Barbara Massengill Gallery, 8949511/895-3377, open weekends and by appointment.

Chloride

s l o h c i N e r r e Pi

Monte Cristo, Wall St., 734-0493, montecristogallery@windstream.net. Daily 10 a.m.-4 p.m.

Ruidoso

Art Ruidoso Gallery, 575-808-1133, www.artruidoso.com, 2809 Sudderth Drive.

Alamogordo

Creative Designs Custom Framing & Gallery, 575-434-4420, 917 New York Ave. Patron’s Hall/Flickinger Center for Performing Arts, 575-434-2202, 1110 New York Ave.

Tularosa

Red Door Gallery and Gifts, 575491-5100, 1201 St. Francis Drive. Thursday to Sunday, noon to 4 p.m. Submit gallery information to Desert Exposure, 1740-A Calle de Mercado, Las Cruces, NM, 88005, email editor@ desertexposure. com.

INT

Silver City

Alaska Mudhead Studio-Gallery, 371 Camino de Vento in Wind Canyon. By appointment, Letha Cress Woolf, potter, 907-783-2780. Ann Simonsen Studio-Gallery, 104 W. Yankie St., 654- 5727. [a]SP.“A”©E, 110 W. Seventh St., 5383333, aspace.studiogallery@gmail. com. Azurite Gallery, 110 W. Broadway, 5389048, Wednesday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.azuritegallery.com. Barbara Nance Gallery & Stonewalker Studio, 105 Country Road, 5340530. By appointment. Stone, steel, wood and paint. Sculpture path. www.barbaraNanceArt.com. Blue Dome Gallery, 307 N. Texas, 5348671. Monday to Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. www. bluedomegallery.com. The Cliffs Studio & Gallery, 205 N. Lyon St. and Yankie, (520) 622-0251. Diane Kleiss’ encaustic multimedia art. By appointment. doart2@yahoo. com, www.dianealdrichkleiss.com. Common Ground, 102 W. Kelly, 534-2087. Open by chance or appointment. Copper Quail Gallery, 211-A Texas St., corner of Yankie and Texas streets, 388-2646. Tuesday to Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Fine arts and crafts. Cow Trail Art Studio, 119 Cow Trail in Arenas Valley. Monday, 12-3 p.m. or by appointment, (706) 533-1897, www. victoriachick.com. Dragonfly Studio, 508 W 6th St., 3888646. By appointment. . Francis McCray Gallery, 1000 College Ave., WNMU, 538-6517. Monday to Friday, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. The Glasserie Studio and Store, 106 E. College, Monday to Saturday 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Guadalupe’s, 505 N. Bullard, 535-2624. Thursday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Hutchings Fine Art, 406 B N. Bullard, Downtown Silver City. Open Wednesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 313-6939. Leyba & Ingalls Arts, 315 N. Bullard St., 388-5725. Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Contemporary art ranging from realism to abstraction in a variety of media. www. LeybaIngallsARTS.com, LeybaIngallsART@zianet.com. Lois Duffy Art Studio, 211C N. Texas, 534-0822. Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Original paintings, cards and prints. www.loisduffy. com, loisduffy@ signalpeak.net. Lumiere Editions, 108 W. Broadway, 956-6369. Vintage and contemporary photography. Monday to Friday. Mary’s Fine Art, 414 E. 21st St., 9567315. Mary A. Gravelle. Mimbres Region Arts Council Gallery, Wells Fargo Bank Bldg., 1201 N. Pope St. www.mimbresarts.org. Molly Ramolla Gallery & Framing, 203 N. Bullard, 538- 5538. www. ramollaart.com. Ol’ West Gallery & Mercantile, 104 W. Broadway, 388- 1811/313-2595. Daily 11 a.m.-6 p.m. The Place@108, 108 Yankie Street. Seedboat Gallery, 214 W. Yankie St., 534- 1136. Wednesday to Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. or by appointment. info@ seedboatgallery.com. Studio Behind the Mountain, 23 Wagon Wheel Lane, 388- 3277. By appointment. www.jimpalmerbronze. com. The StudioSpace, 109 N. Bullard St., 534-9291. www.jessgorell.com. Studio Upstairs, 109 N. Bullard St., 5742493. By appointment. 21 Latigo Trail, 388-4557. Works by Barbara Harrison and others. Soul River Gallery, 200 N. Bullard St., 707-490-4367. Tree Spirit Gallery, 206 N. Bullard St., 303-888-1358. Vibrations Gallery, 106 W. Yankie St., 654-4384, starxr@ usa.net. Wild West Weaving, 211-D N. Texas, 313-1032, www.wildwestweaving. com. Wednesday to Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

MASTER GOURD ARTIST

RED DOT ART GUIDE MAP #25

Oct. 8TH - 9TH • Oct. 15TH - 16TH

10AM - 4PM M

Email pnandjh@gmail.com m for map to the Studio (575) 519-2499 www.Artisticgourds.com


18 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

It’s Not Too Early!! GET YOUR CHRISTMAS QUILTING DONE NOW.... GET IN LINE

CALL CINDY 575-538-2284

TODAY!!!

CALL CINDY FOR INFORMATION AND APPOINTMENTS... 575-538-2284 SNEEZEWEEDS@GMAIL.COM

An que and Collec ble 19th and 20th Century Original Prints and Drawings

A costumed craft vendor sits at the 2015 Dias de los Muertos event. (Photo by Sandy Feutz)

ARTS EXPOSURE

American ar sts and ar sts of New Mexico www.victoriachick.com

Dorothy Van Loan “Mostly Skewbalds”

Cow Trail Art Studio 119 Cow Trail, Arenas Valley, NM Noon - 3 Monday or by appt.

Mountain Music CHECK US OUT ON CRAIG’S LIST

New & Used Musical Instruments Consignments Trade-Ins

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Dias de los Muertos Artisans Sought

he 2016 Silver City Dias de los Muertos is a collaborative event of the Silver City Art Association, the Green Chamber, Mimbres Region Arts Council, Western New Mexico University, Mainstreet, the Arts and Cultural District and other community members. Artisans and food vendor applications are now being ac-

cepted for the big kick-off day of remembrance and celebration taking place from 12:30 to 6 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 30. Headquartered on Market and Texas streets, there will be activities for children of all ages, crafts, art, mariachi music, story tellers, food, a parade and more. Food vendors must comply with the New Mexico Depart-

ment of Health standards and have their temporary license. Artisans will only be permitted to sell Dias de los Muertos themed arts and crafts. See Silver City Dias de los Muertos facebook page for more information and artisan and food vendor applications or contact Diana Ingalls Leyba at 575-388-5725 or leybaingallsarts@qwestoffice.net.

2330 S. Valley Drive

Call for Artists

M-F 10AM - 6PM • SAT 10AM - 5PM • SUN 10AM - 2PM

Aa Studios, located at 2645 Doña Ana Road in Las Cruces, is calling for regional artists to exhibit in 2017. The 17’ x 25’ studio/gallery features fine contemporary art in all media from regional emerging artists and artists with limited local gallery representation. Owner Roy van der Aa opened his working studio as a gallery in August 2012 and participates in the North Valley Art Loop openings every 3 months. One-month or two-month slots are currently available taking either 2 feature walls or the whole gallery. The gallery has posted hours 3 days per month and is open by appointment the rest of the month. There is no fee to apply or show, but the gallery takes a 20% commission on work sold. Shows include advertising and postcards are available at cost. A floorplan of the gallery is available. Interested artists can email a proposal, short artist bio, resumé, and 8 jpeg images (4” on the longest edge at 150 dpi) to wysiwyg@zianet.com. Proposals are due by Nov. 15. For details, email or call 1-575-520-8752.

523-0603

HANGPICTURE’EM HIGH FRAMING FREE CONSULTATIONS

203 N Bullard (corner of Broadway & Bullard) 575-313-0641

ON STAGE

Opening October 8th 4pm– 6pm Pat Clayton Leff Dennis Weller Alan Cox (Late) Leonard Leff WED — SAT 11 – 4

Other times by appointment 575-956-5906

406-A N Bullard • Silver City

‘Servant of Two Masters’ Old French comedy still alive today

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he American Southwest Theatre Company and the New Mexico State University Department of Theatre Arts present Carlo Goldoni’s “The Servant of Two Masters” Translated and adapted by Jeffery Hatcher and Paolo Emilio Landi and directed by Wil Kilroy, department head of the NMSU department of Theatre Arts. Written in 1746, this witty comedy is based on a style of theatre called “Commedia dell’arte,” comedy of professional artists that was popular in Italy and France in the 15th and 16th centuries. It

consists of stock characters like Truffaldino, who signs on to serve two masters to garner double wages and double dinners. Truffaldo is always hungry and always hilarious. The production is full of music, magic and pratfalls. Performances will be at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 1 and 2 at 7:30 Season tickets are available until October 2. Individual show tickets are available at the Pam American Ticket Office at 575-646-1420 or 575-646-4515, Ticketmaster or at the Center for The Arts one hour before each show.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 19

MIMBRES REGION ARTS COUNCIL PRESENTS

HUBBY J ENKINS S AT U R DAY

OCTOBER

Cupid (Jack Lutz) is enlisted to help Lady Belladonna (Tawnya Bass) and Addy (Donny Prosise) in their diabolical schemes, in a scene from Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades. (Courtesy Photo)

1 5TH, 2 0 1 6

ubby Jenkins is a NYC based multi-instrumentalist and songwriter known for his authentic and soulful interpretations of traditional American music. He specializes in early blues, old time, ballads, and ragtime. Hubby developed his style and repertoire from busking in NYC subways and many other cities around the US. Since 2010, he has been an integral part of the Grammy award winning Carolina Chocolate Drops.

Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades Film premieres in Las Cruces in October

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unveil what we hope will become a series of anthologies showcasing short films and giving the filmmakers some exposure – a pursuit which is near and dear to my heart,” Salcido said. “Creating the dark lady to make the introductions was fun, but watching her as she was brought to life by actress Tawnya Bass was almost magical. She really is the personification of Lady Belladonna. “Combining these two elements – the short films and the hostess with her own story to tell – has created a truly unique twist on the anthology model and one I hope will resonate with audiences.” To help celebrate the premiere on Oct. 21, Project Mainstreet is arranging a reception on Main Street prior to the screening, beginning at 6 p.m., complete with free hot dogs for the first 200 ticket holders, provided by Happy Dog, and a red carpet leading to the entrance of the theater, with paparazzi on hand to capture the moment in true Hollywood style. The screening begins at 7 p.m., with a Q&A to follow. Afterwards, attendees are invited to join cast and crew at an after party next door at the Main Street Bistro & Ale House, where they will have the opportunity to chat with the talented men and women who created the evening’s cinematic presentation. Tickets are $6.50. Advance tickets are available for purchase online at www.RioGrandeTheatre.com or at the Doña Ana Arts Council offices upstairs in the Rio Grande Theatre, between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. For more information, call 575-523-6403. To find out more about Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades, visit www.LadyBelladonna.com.

7:30 PM

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ON SCREEN

ankind’s propensity for sin is as vast as the universe and as intimate as a kiss. Nobody knows this better than Perdition’s Mistress of Iniquity, Lady Belladonna: soul broker, keeper of Pandora’s Box and connoisseur of peccadilloes, misdeeds and all too human transgressions. In October PRC Productions and Borderlands Media unleashes “Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades,” a feature length anthology of diabolical proportions, featuring four short films by local filmmakers, introduced by the dark lady herself. Premiering at the Rio Grande Theatre in Las Cruces, Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades will have its audience debut on Friday, Oct. 21. Produced by PRC Productions and Borderlands Media, Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades is an anthology feature film that takes elements of Rod Serling’s Night Gallery, Mystery Science Theatre 3000 and Elvira, Mistress Of The Dark, then shakes liberally to create an irreverent showcase for short films packaged together under a common theme: The Sins of Man. Included in the anthology are “Last Night On Mars,” written and directed by Troy Scoughton Jr.; “Perfect,” written and directed by David Salcido; “The Wake Up Call” and Sins Of Man Contest winner “Wolff’s Law,” both written and directed by Sheridan O’Donnell. Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades was conceived and directed by David Salcido. Troy Scoughton, Sr. and Troy Scoughton, Jr. serve as producers for the film. All of the shorts, as well as the wrap itself, feature the work of New Mexico actors and crew. “It’s been a year in the making, but we are finally ready to

BUCKHORN OPERA HOUSE

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Holiday TRADITIONS . D

oes your family eat strange things in December? Do you celebrate Kwanzaa, Hanukkah, Christmas in a unique fashion? Please share with us your personal and family traditions, recipes, stories and/or photos to be included in the December 2016 issue of Desert Exposure. We want to reflect the special nature of our readers by sharing their happening holidays in our “Biggest little newspaper in the Southwest.”

To submit, send items by Nov. 7 to: editor@desertexposure.com Desert Exposure 1740-A Calle de Mercado Las Cruces, NM 88005

or


20 • OCTOBER 2016

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FOR THE STAGE

Turquoise & Silver Tea

Alamogordo funderaiser evokes grandeur of the past

T

he Flickinger Center Guild will host the 14th Annual Turquoise & Silver Tea at 2 pm on Sunday, Oct. 16, at the Willie Estrada Memorial Civic Center, First Street and Florida File

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Avenue in Alamogordo with the theme of Denim & Diamonds. There will be entertainment, a fashion show from local merchants, door prizes and a silent auction with treasures from local Help

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businesses. Tickets are $12 now and $15 at the door. They are available from any Guild member or online at flickingercenter.com. The Flickinger Guild is composed of volunteers who support the Flickinger Center for Performing Arts, located on New York Ave in Alamogordo. The Flickinger Center hosts a Premier Series of professional stage productions as well as many lo-

cally produced theater and dance performances of exceptional entertainment. Through the generosity of the community, the Flickinger is able to bus local school children for special matinee performances throughout the year to expose the children to the world of stage and theater. Guild members are vital to the Flickinger in performing many services for the theatre: selling and taking tickets, handing out

programs, ushering, manning the concession stand, and hosting receptions. Guild membership is open to anyone in the community who would like to volunteer. The Guild sponsors the Annual Turquoise & Silver Tea as their only fundraiser to allow the group to make major purchases for the theatre. For information, contact the Flickinger Center at 575-4372202.

www.tmatelsonwordpress.com

t@tmatelson.com | 575.313.1388

GRAND OPENING Saturday, October 15, 1 pm—4 pm Visit our new freestyle weaving studio, gallery, & school of craft— drop-in weaving, bookbinding, paper arts, fiber arts Door prizes, demonstrations, and guided tours all afternoon Free mini-class: Learn to Spin Yarn at 3:30 — Free spindles! Come help us weave our studio welcome banner Light refreshments served 108 West Yankie Street, in historic downtown Silver City www.makerysvc.com

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Performer Hubby Jenkins coming to the Buckhorn Oct. 15. (Courtesy Photo)

ON STAGE

Grammy Winner

Banjo Player Hubby Jenkins performs at Buckhorn Opera House

G

rammy Award winner Hubby Jenkins takes the stage at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15 at the Buckhorn Opera House, in Pinos Altos, just a 10-minute drive from Silver City. Jenkins is a talented multi-instrumentalist who endeavors to share his love and knowledge of old-time American music. Born and raised in Brooklyn he delved into his Southern roots, following the thread of African American history that wove itself through country blues, ragtime, fiddle and banjo, and traditional jazz. Jenkins got his higher musical education started as a busker. He developed his guitar and vocal craft on the sidewalks and subway platforms of New York City, performing material by those venerable artists whose work he was quickly absorbing. An ambitiously itinerant musician, he took his show on the road, playing the streets, coffee shops, bars, and house par-

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ties of cities around the country. After years of busking around the country and making a name for himself, Hubby became acquainted with the Carolina Chocolate Drops. Since 2010 he has been part of the Grammy-award-winning Carolina Chocolate Drops and continues to make solo performances. The Mimbres Region Arts Council, in conjunction with premier sponsor Cissy McAndrew/United County Mimbres Realty, brings Jenkins to the area as the first Indie/Folk series concert for the 2016-17 season. For more information Jenkins visit http://www. hubbyjenkins.com/. MRAC members can purchase tickets for $15, non-member tickets are $20, available online at mimbresarts.org, and at the MRAC office in the Wells Fargo Bank building in Silver City. For information call 575-538-2505 or email melody@ mimbresarts.org.

Becoming an Art Collector

CORINNE’S RARE GEMS & FINE JEWELRY

A

s part of the Red Hot RED DOT ArtFest in Silver City, painter and printmaker Victoria Chick offers a learning experience in developing a true art collection from 10 to 11:30 on Oct. 10. There are principles of art collecting no matter what type of art a person finds interesting and Chick will go over these, using examples from her collection.

Chick began collecting original lithographs, etchings, woodcuts and other signed graphics in 1971. She specializes in American artists with a concentration on artists of New Mexico. This RED DOT special presentation begins in her studio and includes a tour of the art in her home. Space is limited. There is no charge but those attending must

have a ticket. Tickets will be available at RED DOT Headquarters on Friday, Oct. 7. This year, RED DOT ArtFest & Studio Tour includes 10 artfilled days, Oct. 7-16, featuring workshops, lectures and demonstrations. A comprehensive brochure with dates and times is available at www.silvercityart. com, gallery locations and at the Silver City Visitor Center.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 21


22 • OCTOBER 2016

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PICKING APPLES • MIKE COOK

Monique Hilverding’s son carefully removes an apple from the tree at the Mesilla Valley Apple Orchard.

Fresh Fruit Celebration

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Burke orchard has 400-plus apple trees on five acres just north of Las Cruces

urke Family Farm U-Pick Apple Orchard began about 40 years ago at 2330 Shalem Colony Trail, and continues to produce thousands of apples each year, said orchard manager LuAnne Burke. The orchard today has more than 400 dwarf apple trees purchased from C&O Nursery in Wenatchi, Washington when Burke’s father began the orchard in 1976. The five-acre orchard continues to be a part of her family trust. Varieties of apples produced by the orchard include Red Delicious, Common Delicious, Jonathan and one tree that Burke thinks is an early golden delicious. Burke said common delicious branches were grafted onto Red Delicious trees, which she described “an exceptionally sweet and yummy apple” for eating and for making pies and cider. The Jonathan apples are tart, she said, and “are perfect for apple desserts and pies.” “The result of the years the apples grew wild on their own produced a unique orchard that is especially tailored for families with children of all ages,” Burke said. “Without proper pruning, limbs grew higher but also began growing out the trunk closer to the ground. Now even a baby taking his or her first steps could walk up and grab an apple. Teenagers can use a picking pole with a fruit basket to reach the most beautiful apples hanging at the very top of the tree. It’s great fun for everyone no matter what their height or ability. That is what makes the apple orchard so special,” she said. Originally a 10-acre orchard, Burke said five acres were cut down to grow alfalfa. Part of the alfalfa field has now been removed to create a parking lot to give visitors full access to the orchard. In September, “pies can be ordered online and picked up at the orchard’s roadside stand,” she said. “We will have pies of different sizes available at the or-

Flat Tires?

Jamar Cotton shows his son Jeremiah how to get apples off a tree at Burke Farms orchard. (Photos by Tabitha Rossman)

chard.” Burke said the orchard is also partnering with nearby Fairacres Elementary School. “They will be featuring and selling special apple dolls that have history of someone who has made a historical difference in the Mesilla Valley,” she said. “The proceeds will assist them in coming to the orchard on a field trip in the fall and also in the spring.” Burke traces her local apple-growing roots back 150 years or more. Her great grandfather, Ira Burke, owned an apple or-

chard in Mesilla Park, she said, and other family members grew prize-winning apples in Mesilla. “The greatest joy afforded to Burke by the orchard today is seeing children picking apples for the first time and hearing laughter in the orchard,” she said. For more information on Burke orchard and Apple Days, and to find out their hours of operation, contact LuAnne Burke at 575- 523-7437 or applepieplease@ gmail.com. Find them on Facebook under U-Pick Mesilla Valley Apple and Fresh Apple Pie.

Apples: The core facts

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Monique Hilverding and her children look at apples on the ground at Burke Farms’ apple orchard.

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id you know apple trees are actually a member of the rose family? “Otherwise known as Malus domestica, the apple is a member of the Rosaceae family, and its siblings include the strawberry, plum, pear, blackberry and rose,” according to www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2014/02/ brief-history-apple-tree. “Scientists believe that apples were first domesticated in the Tian Shan region of southern Kazakhstan,” according to the website. “The Greeks and Romans introduced the domesticated apple to North Africa and Europe during their trading and conquests.” “North American apple har-

vesting began with the settlers at Jamestown in 1607,” according to www.history.com/news/ hungry-history/all-about-apples. “They brought with them seeds and cuttings from Europe.” (You can also learn all about 18th-century horticulturist John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed, on this website.) Apples used to be America’s most popular fruit, but not any longer. “Americans eat an average of 28 pounds of fresh bananas per year, compared to an average of 19 pounds of apples,” the history.com website said. But, unlike

APPLES

continued on page 24


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 23

RANDOM ACTS OF NONSENSE • JIM DUCHENE

The Folly of Kim Jong-un

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ell, it’s official. I’m banned from North Korea. In a stunning move that shook the world, Kim Jong-un, North Korea’s oval oppressor, has (I’m not kidding) outlawed sarcasm in his country. His main paranoia being that those who agree with or praise him are doing so ironically. “This is all America’s fault,” has now come to mean, “Nanny, nanny booboo.” “I am repealing the First Amendment to our constitution,” he announced. “That’s the United States,” Kim Jeng-a, his older brother, dared to correct him, and was then immediately riddled with bullets. “An obvious suicide,” Kim commented, stepping over him on his way to a doughnut. In a way, I blame myself. Not many people know this, but Kim Jong-un and I went to the same prestigious school for dictators in Switzerland in the late ’90s together, the Liebefeld Steinholzli School & Fish Market. It was located in Koniz, near Bern. I went there on a dancing scholarship. He really wasn’t part of the group I hung out with, but somehow he always managed to find out where we were and would show up uninvited. It wasn’t until later that we discovered he had tracking devices implanted in us. I’d rather not say where. From what I remember, he was good at math, but did poorly in his other classes, like Roller Skate Dancing and Advanced Pimple Popping 101. Still, we tried to make him feel like he was one of the gang. “Kim,” I used to trash-talk him, “you’re so short you could work as a bouncer at a roach motel.” “Ah, good one, Mister Jim,” Kim would exclaim, and then laugh a fraction of a second too long.

He was socially awkward, which, I guess, is better than being awkwardly social. Normal social cues were just out of his reach, so, as a result, he would either laugh too long or too loud or at inappropriate times. “My dog just died.” “Ha, ha, ha! Good one, Mister Jim.” But all that is neither here nor there. Well, it might be here, but it’s definitely not there. Unless there means here, in which case it would be both here AND there. What happened is that when Kim Jong-un had his father assassinated, er... I mean, when his father died of natural causes and Kim became North Korea’s latest tyrant du jour, he quickly got sick and tired of all the backhanded compliments he kept receiving from the other despots of the world. Russian president Vladimir Putin was especially fond of “Putin” it to the young dictator. “Comrade, you are so smart it only takes you three hours to watch 60 Minutes.” Chinese president, Sum Ting Wong, couldn’t help but join in on the fun. “Yes, and you are very handsome as well. You are so handsome that you don’t have to worry about birth control. Your face does just fine by itself.” Impotent around the other mocking world leaders, Kim had no choice but to take it out on his loyal subjects, the only ones he had the power to bully. “Obviously, they have too good a life eating tree bark and drinking grass soup that they have become audacious and disrespectful,” Kim told the closest of his advisors whom he hadn’t ordered to be executed yet. Everywhere he went, his loving chattel showered him with compliments, but he was suspicious of them all. “Surely, behind their hungry

smiles and sunken eyes, they must be hiding their true sarcastic feelings.” “That’s a nice haircut, Chairman.” “Have him shot.” “You look so thin, Supreme Leader.” “He thinks I’m fat. Boil him in oil.” “Hot oil, your excellency?” “Of course I mean hot oil! What other kind of oil can a person be boiled in? And, when you’re done, feed yourself to the pigs for your stupidity.” Even the elderly women, who had always found him so cute as a young child they couldn’t help but pinch his chubby little cheeks, weren’t above suspicion. “May I kiss your hand, Devine One?” “Of course you may.” To his bodyguard he said: “Feed this wanton woman to the pigs, but do it gently. She IS my grandmother, after all.” His oldest brother, the wise Kim Djang-o (the “D” is silent), who had been educated in America, spoke to him. “Kim?” “Yes, Kim?” “It is folly that you take away the people’s capacity for sarcasm, and it will be your undoing. Listen to me, my brother, for I wish to save you from the sad fate our Muslim friends call the Gaddafi Shuffle. We are the poorest country on this humble planet, and yet you spend what money we have and what money we receive from other, greater countries on nuclear missiles that don’t work and an Army we don’t need. You can starve our people of food and their bodies may still work, but, if you starve their minds, they will wither away and die. Take care, lest they rise up as one, a mighty dragon seeking retribution. To think, to speak, to joke, to laugh... these are all

gifts from the Gods, even sarcasm. They should be honored, not outlawed,” Kim Jong-un sat there, mainly because he was too heavy to stand. After a thoughtful pause, he spoke. “You are right, my brother.” To his bodyguard he said: “Are

the pigs still hungry?” Born in the southwest, Jim Duchene wishes you a Happy Halloween. Go scare yourself silly at JimDuchene.BlogSpot. com, RaisingMyFather. BlogSpot.com, or @ JimDuchene.

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24 • OCTOBER 2016

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Fort Cummings in 1882. (Courtesy Photo)

Fort Cummings ruins in 1940. (Courtesy National Archives)

FORT CUMMINGS • KATHY WEISER

Fort Established Near Cooke’s Spring Site protected Butterfield Overland Stage stop

F

irst “discovered” in 1846 by a Mormon Battalion traveling from Santa Fe to California, Cooke’s Spring, in present-day Luna County, New Mexico, was named after the battalion’s commander and would later become the site of Fort Cummings. After the spring was discovered, it and the nearby pass made it a popular overland route for travelers, but as such, also made it a popular ambush site for the hostile Apaches. The first fort was established by Captain Valentine

Dresher, who halted his Company B, 1st Infantry, California Volunteers here on Oct. 2, 1863 during the Civil War. Choosing the site for a permanent fort, building soon began and over the next decade, a barracks, officers’ quarters, a hospital, and numerous other buildings were built, including a high adobe wall surrounding it. Later, Fort Cummings became a regular Army garrison, protecting travelers on the overland route as well as a Butterfield Overland Mail station that was

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situated on the site between 1858 until 1861. In September 1867, the fort was called home to the 38th U.S. Infantry of Buffalo Soldiers, which included the only female known to have ever been a part of the all-black regiments – Cathay Williams. During this time, the fort was suffered a brief mutiny in December 1867 when a camp follower was expelled for stealing money. Several expeditions and many patrols set out from the fort, some as far as Mexico, but the soldiers made few contacts with the Indians. The fort was abandoned in 1873 and it began to deteriorate under the elements. However, it was reoccupied in 1880, after a band of Warm Springs Apaches under Vic-

torio bolted from the San Carlos reservation and began terrorizing southern New Mexico and western Texas. In 1886, one of the first test heliograph messages was relayed from Fort Cummings to Tubac, Arizona, and back over a distance of nearly 300 miles. A heliograph used a mirror to reflect sunlight to a distant observer by moving the mirror and sending Morse code. It became a simple but highly effective instrument in the 19th century and continued to be used up until about 1935. Today, there is little left of Fort Cummings, but the crumbling remains of adobe walls and earthen mounds indicating where foundations once stood. The ruins, currently “maintained” by the Bureau

of Land Management, are located about 20 miles northeast of present-day Deming, New Mexico. To get there, take State Highway 26 about seven miles from Florida, New Mexico, then turn onto Cooke’s Canyon Road NE at mile marker 14, by the railroad water tank. After traveling a little more than a mile on a gravel road, the path crosses a cattle guard and jogs left onto a distinct Jeep trail. After several more miles, the road crosses another cattle guard and soon a plaque can be seen on the left, and an old cemetery on the right. The ruins of Fort Cummings are about 500 yards to the north. This story is reprinted courtesy of Legends of America (www.legendsofamerica.com) and updated in August 2015.

Fort Cummings today. (Courtesy Bureau of Land Management)

APPLES

continued from page 22

Corner Florida & Columbus Hwy. PO Box 191, Deming NM 88031 (575) 546-3922

the tropical bananas, apples are grown in every U.S. state, making apples “the third most important fruit for the U.S. economy, behind grapes and oranges,” the website said. “The United States is home to approximately 7,500 apple producers, which grow around 48,000 tons of apples per year, generating some $2.7 billion annually.” More than 80 million tons of apples are produced worldwide each year, with China producing about half and the United States coming in second. There are more than 7,500 cultivars of apples today, according to the

Guide to Cultivated Plants. The part of the apple that we eat is called the pome, and is actually a part of the apple blossom. “More than 100 apple varieties are grown commercially in the United States, but a total of 15 popular varieties account for almost 90 percent of production,” according to www.usaapple.org. Those 15, according to the website, are Mcintosh, Fuji, red delicious, gala, crispin, braeburn, honeycrisp, jonagold, Granny Smith, empire, golden delicious, cameo, jazz, macoun, ambrosia, Paula Red, Cripps Pink and Cortland.

David Protextor picks apples at U-Pick Mesilla Valley Apple Orchard Burke Farms. (Photo by Tabitha Rossman)


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 25

BORDERLINES • MARJORIE LILLY

Come Visit Our New & Second Location!

Generosity

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Here are some of the buildings for purchase at our new Buckeye lot.t.

Things changing for laborers in southern New Mexico

worked a bit at the processing plants in Deming this past summer, and it was the first time in years that I didn’t feel like asking the workers about the narco-violence in Balleza, in Casas Grandes, in Torreon or Guanajuato — the towns and cities they come from. Though many of them have lost family or friends, in the lunchrooms there’s nothing but talking and smiling, or even gales of laughter. They left the violence behind long before I did. I didn’t go work in the onion or chile plants to check on the working conditions, but solely because I had a sudden financial crisis. What engaged my attention more than these things was the hyper-generosity of the ladies I worked with, something that’s imbedded in the fiber of their bodies, under the skin, stuck under their heart. I worked first at the onion shed known to some workers as “La Curva,” because it’s on the big curve on the Lordsburg Highway after Red Mountain Middle School. The woman beside me on the onion sorting line, Lara, approached me with a bottle of water. I asked her if she had bought it for me. She said, deadpan, “No, no one else wanted it.” So I accepted it, to take it off her hands. In the afternoon in the small lunchroom, a woman I didn’t know stood near a beverage vending machine ready to put a dollar bill in one of the slots. She moved the bill up and down with a squint on her face, asking me, “Which one do you want?” It looked as if “no” was not one of her options, so I said “OK” to a bottle of water. Then the lady sitting in front of me at the table pushed a fat plastic bottle of mango-pina Kool-Aid toward me. So I said, “Thanks,” and took it. I added, “Que mas? (What more?)” with a smile. The woman smiled back cheerfully. It’s taken me a while, but I realize that these ladies make it seem as if you’re doing them a favor by accepting gifts.

Extraordinary hours in the onion shed Illegal practices do exist. One woman in the lunchroom who spoke English told me that at the height of the season they sometimes work 20 hours, which is beyond the legal limit of 16 hours. When I asked her if this is legal, she laughed and said, “Oh, no!” but added that a lot of workers want things this way “so they can put food on their table for their children.” The woman who offered me water, Lara, met me at the supermarket a little while ago and said that this season they worked 21 hours at least one day, after I left that job. Some women from Palomas go home and sleep just one hour before coming back, she claims. At

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Southern New Mexico chile is well known across the country. It can be difficult to find people to pick all the fields. (Photo by Elva K. Österreich) least one woman slept in her car a few hours. Some people like getting the extra money, she says, but other people leave work when this point in the season comes. The other processors in town stick pretty much to the law, as far as I know. But the laws relating to the processors are very weak in the antediluvian state of New Mexico. There are no laws at all in regard to lunch or break times. One day at La Curva I worked 16 hours, and we just had two 15-minute breaks. I got pretty hungry. There was an hour-long lunch, which I liked because I could drive into town and get some things done. I badgered one supervisor for a while because my mouth was parched in the triple-digit temperatures and they didn’t have ice water. He said they had tried having a keg of water there once and it didn’t work because people left the paper cups all over the place. Workers could buy cold water in bottles in the vending machines, but the day before they ran out of water when the temperatures got hot.

Changes in Deming fields There have been some changes in the chile and onion fields in the past few years. One is that some labor contractors are beginning to pay everyone the minimum hourly wage of $7.50, even “los ancianitos (the elderly),” when a few years ago the wage laws were almost universally ignored. Both federal and New Mexico laws guarantee at least the minimum wage to all hand harvesters, even if the work pays by the bucket. The reason they’re doing this is not because of a sudden spasm of generosity or conscience, but because of the need to attract workers to the fields. There was an exodus of field workers in about 2010 when mechanical pickers replaced humans in the red chile harvest. I first heard about this late last year, but one picker told me he

thought the practice started in 2014. Related to this issue is the widespread use of what current pickers call workers brought in “por contrato,” officially referred to as guest workers. They come from various states in Mexico. Because pickers are so hard to come by, and growers have had to plough under some crops, they have resorted to the government guest worker (H2A) program. The labor contractors are the ones who do the paperwork to bring pickers here. They have to get their applications in to the Department of Workforce Solutions early in the year. This year there were 115 requests for pickers in Deming in May and June.

Some things stay the same A few things are the same in Deming as they were 20 years ago, when I first lived here. The first is that farm workers are still afraid to give me their name — one even claimed he fears getting beaten up. Another is that they still think of the minimum wage as applying to a days’ work, as it is in Mexico. I have to remind them the minimum wage is hourly in the U.S. Something else that will never change is the way the workers grow wild sunflowers, corn, and squash next to their trailers and beans on their chain-link fences. Elena Perez Hernandez from Guanajuato was roasting elotes (ears of corn) on a little makeshift grill in front of their tiny pink trailer when I went to talk to them. She smilingly gives me not one, but two, in a plastic bag when I leave. They’re still warm when I get home and eat them with pesto on spaghetti. You would think the growers and contractors might give more to people who themselves give so much, but they don’t. Borderlines columnist Marjorie Lilly lives in Deming.

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Saturday, November 12 Sunday, November 13

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Mimbres Valley Special Event Center 2300 E. Pine Street – Deming Get all your holiday shopping done in one day!! Food and drink available both days For Vendor information call 575-546-2674 or email: executivedirector@demingchamber.com


26 • OCTOBER 2016

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PUBLISHER’S NOTEBOOK • RICHARD COLTHARP

Time Out of Mind

Mastering space and time in southern New Mexico

M

ontana calls itself “Big Sky Country.� Well, Henry Lightcap and I will tell any of those Montana cowboys, “The skies are pretty dang big in New Mexico, too, bub.� Our neighbors to the east might sing, “The stars at night, are big and bright, deep in the heart of Texas.� Well, Henry and I will tell those Lone Star cowboys, “The stars at night are pretty dang big and bright in New Mexico, too, bub.� Driving across rural New Mexico at night (watch out for

the deer and jackalope) is tailor-made for ooohs and aaahs. Around nearly every bend, popping out from behind a mountain slope, is an incredible skyscape. Late this summer, I found myself driving between Lordsburg and Rodeo, sadly without my compadre Henry Lightcap. Had Henry been riding along, he would have said something like, “Well, shut my mouth,� and proceeded to hang his mouth wide open in awe. The stars were indeed big and bright that night, and the Milky Way indeed milky.

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Some of those stars are so far away, the light we’re actually seeing from them can be three or four years old or more. Some of the stars we think we’re seeing, may just be light from stars already burned out. It’s the closest thing I can think of to having a time machine. If I really did have a time machine to travel in the past, to glory in the glimmer of some of those stars gone by, what better place to use it than right here in southern New Mexico. In my mind, the time machine would be a non-intrusive device, more like a Star Trek transport beam than a big, bulky H.G. Wells contraption. It would also allow me to travel back without altering the course of human and natural history. So no one would have to worry about me creating a world where it snows chile rellenos and rains RC Cola. Here are some southern New Mexico stops. William Bonney – I’ve never been a student or follower of Billy the Kid. I’ve never even seen “Young Guns.� Still, as a New Mexican, it would be a shame to have a time machine and not use it to follow around the Kid for a while, if only to confirm or refute a few of the legends. With as many places as Bonney is claimed to have been, and as many things he is claimed to have done, he must have had a transporter of his own to show up so frequently over such a wide area. Either that or he was actually one of a set of quintuplets. Col. Fountain – The date

was Feb. 1, 1896. The place was right on what is today the Otero County/Doùa Ana County line, along U.S. Highway 70. That should be pretty easy to dial in. The event there, however, will not be very easy to take. It is the last known location of famed lawyer, war hero and politician Col. Albert Jennings Fountain and his 8-year-old son, Henry. Fountain’s buckboard and some bloody ground were found, but no bodies. The mystery of this history persists to this day. Suspects were indicted and brought to trial for murder three years later, but no one was ever convicted. The case is technically still open today. And while I’m already on U.S. 70, I’d probably go ahead and leap forward a dozen years to Leap Day (Feb. 29) 1908, just about 25 miles west, to the murder site of Sheriff Pat Garrett. I could verify if Garrett was indeed shot in the back while answering nature’s call, and who was on the other end of the smoking gun. Corona, July 1947 – While driving through Corona, I once had a close encounter with a majestic bird. It swooped down, soared within inches of my windshield and gave me – literally – the eagle eye. Probably the most beautiful creature I’ve ever seen. Legend has it, though, in July 1947 rancher Mac Brazel had a close encounter of a different kind, with a different kind of flying object. He collected unusual parts of what appeared to be wreckage from an air machine, but nothing like Brazel had

ever seen. Soon Brazel had pieces in front of military officials at Roswell Army Air Field, leading to the now famous Roswell Daily Record headline, “RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region.� The Army quickly claimed it was a U.S. government craft, but the debate continues to rage. Win, Place or Show club, Ruidoso – My grandparents lived in Fort Worth, but every summer traveled to Ruidoso to watch the horse races and escape the miserable Texas heat and humidity. They also loved to dance to western swing and occasionally enjoy a cold beer. I can’t say for certain they hung out in Win, Place or Show, but since the bar has played country music almost nightly since it opened in 1956, it’s a pretty good bet. And as my grandmother said, “Always bet on the nose,� meaning forget the place and show, bet to win. Would love to venture back to, say, 1966, and have a Falstaff with Boonie and Dado after a day at the races. Richard Coltharp is publisher of Desert Exposure and the Las Cruces Bulletin. Seven years ago this week he had a green chile cheeseburger at the nowdefunct Outpost Bar & Grill in Carrizozo for the last time. He’d love to go back in time for another of those. He can be reached at richard@ lascrucesbulletin.com

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DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 27

THE STARRY DOME • BERT STEVENS

I

Draco, the Dragon

f you look northward on these October evenings, you will see a dragon above Polaris. It is not flying around breathing fire at the command of Daenerys Targaryen in Game of Thrones, but forever circles the north celestial pole. Draco, the Dragon is a mythological creature whose head is two-thirds of the way up in our northern sky and circles westward half way around the pole. Ursa Minor, the Lesser Bear, is surrounded on three sides by the Dragon. Hercules was a major character in Greek mythology with a very expansive myth. At one point in the myth, Hercules had been driven mad by Hera, queen of the gods. In his deranged state, he killed his wife, son and daughter. Regretting his actions, he went to the Oracle at Delphi who instructed him to serve his cousin King Eurystheus for twelve years. In return, he would become immortal. King Eurystheus ordered Hercules to perform ten labours, which he successfully completed. However, Eurystheus refused to recognize two of the labours, one because Hercules was paid for performing it and the other because he had help. Hercules had to perform two additional tasks. One of the two new tasks was to fetch the golden apples of Hesperides, the nymphs of the evening. They tended a peaceful garden at the far west end of the world where Hera had planted an orchard that produced the golden apples. Even though the Hesperides were supposed to protect the apples, they sometimes picked the apples themselves. Hera placed the hundred-headed, always-awake dragon Landon to guard the apples from everyone including the Hesperides. To be able to retrieve the golden apples, Hercules had to overcome the Landon. How he performed this feat or whether he actually killed the dragon is unknown. Nevertheless, Hercules succeeded and was able to retrieve the apples. Landon was placed in the sky as Draco, with the now immortal Hercules just to the south of his heads. Draco is the eighth largest constellation in the sky so it has many deep-sky objects. One of them is NGC 6543, known as the Cat’s Eye Nebula. Discovered by William Herschel on February 15, 1786, the Cat’s Eye is a planetary nebula near the center of the dragon’s heart. Herschel and the other early astronomers were not sure of the composition and source of planetary nebulae. They were small and looked a little like the disc of a planet (hence the name). English amateur astronomer Sir William Huggins used his private observatory to study the spectra of astronomical objects. Working together with his wife, Margaret Lindsay, and next-door neighbor, the chemist William Allen Miller, they recorded the spectra of various celestial objects. This was the first use of dry plate photography in astronomy. They used a prism to split the light from the object into individual colors, just as raindrops split sunlight into a rainbow. Visible among the resulting rainbow of colors, were dark lines and bright lines at specific colors. Chemists like Miller already knew

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Draco, the Dragon encircles the north celestial pole. Among the stars of Draco is Alpha Draconis, or Thuban. This star is not very bright, only magnitude 3.6, but it was the Pole Star before Polaris, claiming that distinction from 3942 BC to 1793 BC. Earth’s polar axis wobbles in forty-seven-degree-wide circle every 26,000-years, pointing at different stars along that circle. Thuban is about 300 light-years away. It is a spectral class A0 white giant, 120 times more luminous than our Sun.

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Calendar of Events – October 2016 (MST) 08 11 15 22 27

10:33 p.m. Morning 10:23 p.m. 2:04 p.m. 10 a.m.

30 30

11:38 a.m. 1 p.m.

First Quarter Moon Mercury near Jupiter Full Moon Last Quarter Moon Mercury passes the Sun heading into the evening sky New Moon Venus passes 3 degrees south of Saturn

The Ringed Planet is twenty-three that the individual lines represented specific chemical elements. They degrees above the southwest horivarious lines can only appear if the zon as it gets dark, setting by 9:15 elements are in the form of a gas. If p.m. Being so low, it is not a good they were bright lines, the element target for telescopic observation. was being excited by heat or ultra- Saturn’s Rings are tilted down 26.5 violet light, creating emission lines. degrees with the northern face The dark lines indicated the element showing and they are 35.2 secondswas a cold gas and was absorbing of-arc across. Saturn’s disc is 15.5 the light from the spectrum, creating seconds-of-arc across. Saturn moves slowly eastward from western to absorption lines. On 29 August 1864, they took the central Ophiuchus this month. Mars’s disc is 8.1 seconds-offirst spectrogram of a planetary nebula when they recorded the Cat’s arc across at midmonth when it Eye nebula’s spectrum. From it, they will shine at magnitude +0.2. It could see bright and dark lines that is thirty-two degrees above the proved that planetary nebulae were south-southwestern horizon as it gaseous and not stellar. This was gets dark, setting around 11:15 p.m. a major step in separating nebulae Mars moves eastward from western from galaxies just from their spec- to eastern Sagittarius. Jupiter has appeared in the morntra. Galaxies always appear stellar from the millions of stars that each ing sky. It rises around 6:00 a.m. and one contains. Nebulae, on the other it is ten degrees above the eastern hand, have emission and absorption horizon as it gets light. At midmonth, Jupiter shines at magnitude -1.7 with lines. This set the stage for a better un- a disc that is 28.7 seconds-of-arc derstanding of a planetary nebula. across. The King of the Gods is movWe now know that changes in an ing slowly eastward in west-central older star’s core causes the star to Virgo. Late last month Mercury passed heat up, making it expand into a giant star. The process pushes the out- its high point for its current appearer atmosphere away from the star ance in the morning sky and it will fast enough that it can escape the be gone by midmonth. On October star’s gravity and spread out into in- 1, Mercury’s disc will be 6.5 secterstellar space around the star. The onds-of-arc across and 62 percent ultraviolet light for the now hotter illuminated. The Messenger of the star causes the gas to glow, creating Gods rises at 5:45 a.m., reaching the emission lines Huggins saw in his an altitude of ten degrees above the eastern horizon as it starts to spectrum of the Cat’s Eye Nebula. get light. Mercury travels from the The Planets for October 2016. Venus and Saturn are low in the southern panhandle of Leo, across west-southwest as evening begins. Virgo, and into western Libra by Venus will pass three degrees south month’s end. Mercury will be close of Saturn on October 29. At mid- to Jupiter on October 11, giving you month, Venus will be magnitude -3.7 the opportunity to enjoy this pairing with a disc that is 12.9 seconds-of- and “keep watching the sky”! arc across and 82 percent illuminated. The Goddess of Love is twelve An amateur degree above the west-southwest astronomer horizon as it gets dark and sets by for more than 8:15 p.m. During the month, Venus 45 years, Bert travels from western Libra eastward Stevens is through the northern panhandle co-director of of Scorpius and into south-central Desert Moon Observatory in Ophiuchus. Las Cruces.

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28 • OCTOBER 2016

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100 YEARS OF WATER CONTROL • WILLIAM DOOLEY

Elephant Butte Dam Ce

Three-weekend birthday party O

n Oct. 19, Elephant Butte Dam in southern New Mexico will be celebrating a century of service. To commemorate this historic occasion Lago Rico, Inc. and The Elephant Butte Dam Site Historic District are hosting a celebration from Oct. 7-23. Elephant Butte Dam was authorized in 1905 as part of the Rio Grande Project, one of the earliest projects of the U.S. Reclamation Service (now the Bureau of Reclamation). Located in Sierra County, Elephant Butte Dam today provides irrigation waters to both the United States and Mexico as well as providing flood control and producing almost 4.5 million kilowatt hours of clean, hydro-electric electricity every year. The dam created Elephant Butte Lake, New Mexico’s largest body of water and a popular outdoor recreation centers. The construction of the dam began in earnest in 1911. However, the supporting infrastructure was being put into place as early as 1908. Construction on the earliest structure, the water tank, began in August of that year. The water tank still stands today as a silent guardian of guests of the Elephant Butte Dam Site Historic District. The Historic District, located South and East of the Dam, is the location of the community that sprang up as construction began. The community, referred to as the Dam Site, was a thriving town of more than 3,000 residents. Today, the Historic District brings thousands of visitors every year to stay in the historic lodgings, hike the many trails, picnic among the intricate stone lined garden terraces, use the facilities of the state’s largest marina, fish, camp and enjoy the many wonderful recreation opportunities at adjacent Elephant Butte Lake State Park. The state park, created in 1964, is New Mexico’s largest State Park. Revenues from the park make up about 25 percent of the department’s annual income. Hundreds of thousands of guests enjoy the area each year. The Saturday closest to the Fourth of July draws a crowd that makes the park New Mexico’s third largest city. Many buildings from both the dam construction era (early 1900s) and the Civilian Conservation Corps era (1930s) still stand, including the C.C.C. built tourist cabins located along the old railroad bed used during Dam construction. The highlight of the Historic District is the administration building. Now restored and converted into an eight room inn, the building contains many original fixtures including the safe, pursers’ cage and hardwood floors. Historic photos and Southwestern art line the hallways. Plans are in place to restore the boathouse complex near the administration building into a museum and retail area. At the time of its completion, Elephant Butte Dam was the second largest dam in the world, surpassed only by Egypt’s Aswan (now Lower Aswan) Dam. The dam required 621,550 barrels of cement as well as the construction of a spillway and embankment structure. The Elephant Butte Dam embankment structure is widely recognized as one of the last major American engineering efforts to rely solely on manpower and mules. The Elephant Butte Dam and The Historic District are in the National Register of Historic Places. The Dam itself is also a National Civil Engineering Landmark. The area is an active pa-

Fri Octo

world together to study and create in this seleontological site with several different species of rene setting. dinosaurs and mammals having been discovered. Far from being an old man, the Elephant Most recently, a group of gentlemen digging a bachButte Dam enters its second century elor party fire pit on a remote beach discovered the 5-1 alive and kicking, still the centerpiece remains of a stegomastodon. A smaller relative of Light Up the Nigh of a growing, thriving community. mastodons and mammoths, stegomastodon roamed hatchery and illum Information on the Centennial the area before the last Ice Age. Rio Grande and th Celebration can be found at www. The dam and the water it provides are primary luminarias and LED facebook.com/buttecentennial/, by economic sources for the communities of the Southwill be vendors, foo calling 575-894-2041 or emailing butern Rio Grande area. Tourism and agriculture are tainment. Lago Ric tecenntennialinfo@gmail. the predominant industries. The lake is just one of selling light-up toys com. many outdoor recreation opportunities in rural Sidancers from aroun erra County. Mountain Biking, hiking and exploring are being invited to the unique geology of the area along with a growing and help lead th Arts scene has made the area a favorite retreat for tourists in the know. fun on the danc Diverse agricultural products such as New Mexcost $5 or a ico pecans, balsamic vinegar, cotton, organic vegetables and of course the world famous Hatch 8 a.m. -7 p.m. Valley chile make the area a must for anyone Damsite Book Festival takes place at the Damwith an appreciation of good, wholesome, local site Restaurant Patio and in the Winding Roads products. area. This event provides local and regional The many ghost towns juxtaposed with the authors with the opportunity to sell and sign Spaceport America complex make the area books and interact with guests. There will also a truly unique vacation destination. The dam be a used book market. Throughout the day, site Winter Arts Colony, located speakers will present talks on various subjects at the Historic District from October through including the space industry in New MexiMarch, brings both co, local treasure hunting and more. This accomplished event will be family appropriate and and student is free although donations will be artists from appreciated. all over the 6 – 9 p.m.

Saturday, October 8

Friday, October 7

Author Dinner at the Damsite Restaurant Patio offers a traditional meal of smoked brisket and all the trimmings. The evening features various authors/ historians in a moderated discussion about the history of Elephant Butte Dam. Tickets are $35 and are available in advance or at the event.

Centennial Events

All events can be found at the Elephant Butte Dam Site Historic District.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 29

entennial

y planned (Photo Courtesy of the Bureau of Reclamation Archives, Elephant Butte Dam, Elephant Butte, New Mexico. Retrieved September, 2016)

iday, ober 14

Friday, Saturday & Sunday, October 21-23

The Ringers on the Rio Horseshoe Tourney takes place at the fish hatchery with a series of tournaments. On Friday evening there will be the Sierra Showdown single-elimination tournament. Saturday will be the Ringers on the Rio double-elimination tourney for 2-person teams. The event will also have a food and beverage tent. There will be vendors and informational booths.

Saturday & Sunday, October 15, 16

10 a.m. -7 p.m. on Saturday and 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Sunday The Wooden Nickel Maker Mart along Winding Roads is a market of handmade arts and crafts including a Lago Rico booth selling centennial merchandise, 5,000 wooden nickels will be given away prior to the event to be used as entry tokens. The event also features food vendors and a beer/wine garden. There will be a children’s area with activities and games and a stage hosting musical groups, workshops/ performances and public speakers. Saturday evening it will be a good location for families to watch the fireworks from. On Sunday morning before the market opens at noon, there will be an all-faith service and pancake breakfast.

10 p.m. ht is at the historic fish minates the banks of the he hatchery with candle D lighting effects. There od, beverages and enterco Inc. will have a booth s and accessories. Swing nd the southwest region o demonstrate their skills he crowd in some retro cefloor. The event will a Wooden Nickel.

Photos by Elva K. Österrich


30 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

The winners of the annual writing contest took on some universal themes this year not only reflecting the unique nature of southern New Mexico, but broadening into the world by including themes of loneliness, death and renewal. For more winning writing contest entries see the November 2016

issue of Desert Exposure. This year eight judges received the contest entries, with no names attached, and instead of five winners we have six because of a tie between two of the poems. The careful consideration of all the judges is

highly appreciated and recognized for the difficult job it is. Desert Exposure regular contributor Jim Duchene’s story about aging and being responsible for our parents was easily the winner of this contest earning positive comments and thoughtful praise.

2016 WRITING CONTEST • JIM DUCHENE

Driving Me Crazy

A man, his father and the open road ...

J

ust recently, my father asked me if I would drive him out of town to visit some family he hadn’t seen in a while. I told him sure, but to let me check with my wife first. You see, my elderly father is a handful. After my mother died, in a moment of weakness I asked him if he wanted to come live with us. “Hello? Hello?” I said into the phone I was talking to him on. My father was already knocking at my front door with his suitcase packed. Of course I jest. What I didn’t realize was that my father would turn out to be more work than all of my children combined. He’s recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, so my wife and I have the additional sadness of watching a man who could once take apart his car and put it back together with no problem, become someone who once made my wife cry when he wondered what those little green balls were in the basket on her kitchen table. “Those are limes, pop,” she told him. “That’s what I thought,” my father assured her, but his eyes said something else. And so I asked my wife about taking him on a road trip. “That’s a good idea,” is what she said. I could use a break, is what she meant. What she didn’t do was remind me that I once took a similar trip with him a few years back and I swore to her and to anybody else who would listen that I would never do such a frustrating thing ever again. “I don’t know, pop,” I told him, when he first brought the subject up. “If you don’t want to take me, I’ll drive myself,” he said. “You’d better take him,” my wife told me later. “You don’t want him to go and never find his way back, do you?” When I didn’t answer, she asked me again, louder this time, “Do you?” You know, for a tiny woman, my wife can sure hit pretty hard. The interesting thing about my dad was that late into his marriage to my mom he

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GRAND PRIZE WINNER willingly gave up driving. As he got older it was my mother who drove the two of them around more and more, until she was the one who always drove. I could understand that. I used to drive for a living, and, after being behind the wheel all day long, it was relaxing to sit in the passenger seat and let my wife deal with the usual gang of idiots on the road. My father would still get behind the wheel whenever he wanted to go someplace and my mother did not. The accident he had the last time he ever drove, was why I found myself on this particular road trip with him. It was night and we were on a highway that he couldn’t find on the map. He was a little concerned. That happens when people get older, they worry about a lot of little things. Also, they can’t read a map, especially in the middle of the night. Personally, I enjoy driving the highways of New Mexico in the middle of the night. Arthur C. Clarke, in his classic science fiction book 2001: A Space Odyssey, said in his introduction that there is a star in the sky for every man who’s ever lived. On a clear night in the southwest, you can see every one. “Son,” my dad told me, looking out the window. It was dark. Very dark. That was another thing for him to worry about. “Do you know where you’re at?”

“Sure, pop,” I tried to reassure him. “We’re just fine. I’m heading east, and I can only drive so far before I drive into the ocean.” Obviously, I was joking. “What?” he said, jumping up in his seat. His eyes got big. Real big. “Until you drive into the ocean? I think you’re lost, son. I’ve driven this road many times, and this area does not look familiar.” He looked out of his window again, into the darkness, and whispered, “I don’t remember this area. Nothing looks familiar, and I know this area. I’ve driven it many times.” Louder, he said: “You’re lost.” “I’m not lost, pop.” “I think you’re lost.” “When you don’t know where you are, and you don’t know how to get where you’re going... that’s when you’re lost. I’m on the right road and heading in the right direction. I’m not lost.” “Son, I know what lost looks like, and you’re lost.” I calmed myself down--no one can push your buttons like your parents--and then I tried to calm my father down. “Relax, pop,” I told him. “We’re in no hurry and I’ve got a full tank of gas. Worse case scenario, we’ll just stop somewhere for the night.” My father nodded his head at the last part. When a man gets older, he gets slower and slower to pull out his wallet to pay for anything. I had gassed up twice and we had eaten six times, but only my dad’s appetite ever made an appearance. In the meantime, his head was on a swivel, turning left and right, left and right. His eyes were all bugged out like a wrinkled Roger Rabbit as he strained to see a landmark, any landmark. “I don’t remember any of this area,” he said. “Nothing looks familiar. I think we’re on the wrong road. I’ve traveled this road many times, and I’m familiar with all the landmarks.” He forgot that I’m looking out the windshield, too. If I couldn’t see any landmarks, I

know he couldn’t see any landmarks. Apparently, my father must have had night-vision goggles implanted in his corneas because... “Now, that tree over there, I don’t remember it. I also don’t remember any 7-11s when I last drove out this way. I know this area. I think we’re lost.” “We’re not lost, pop,” I repeated, and then I tried to change the subject. “When did you last drive out this way?” My father thought a bit. “Hmmm... ahh... drive this way. Now, I was born in 1919--or was it ‘20? Joined the service. When did I last drive this way? Had to have been 1945, right after the war, and again in 1953 (or was it 1954?). Maybe it was 1954, because I had a ‘54 Chevy. Great car. I drove it back and forth many times.” I was trying not to fall asleep from his stroll down memory lane, when he suddenly snapped out of his nostalgia. “Hey, I don’t remember a Wal-Mart out here! Now I know you’re lost.” “Hey, look at that!” I told him, pointing out my window. He looked out his window. “Look at what?” he asked. There was a fish truck passing us on the left, but in those few seconds it had moved in front of us and all that was left of it were two red dots in the distance. I’ve forgotten the name of the company, but the motto on the side of the truck was: “If It Stinks, We Have It.” “That’s a funny motto for a company,” I told him. “What?” I told him again. “What?” And then I told him several times more. It was time for drastic measures, so I changed the subject again. “Hey, Dad, what’s that?” I told him, pointing out his window this time. He looked out into the night. A night so black David Chase could have ended The Sopranos with it. “I don’t know,” my Dad told me, and then shook his head sadly. “I don’t recognize anything.”

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DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 31

Taking the reader on a journey that starts and stops at home, Mike Fugagli’s story examines human meaning in the midst of nature. “I like how the tone changes, getting more intense in description and never letting up,” writes one of the judges.

2016 WRITING CONTEST • MIKE FUGAGLI

The Omen

Out in nature, the world is inside

A

lthough both men were caught by surprise, their meeting was not entirely coincidental. In the apocalyptic heat of June, the river that separated them was of mutual, if varied, concern. Jack had come to the water to reclaim the property line. Where the barbed-wire fence currently stood his neighbor’s cattle had access to the entire floodplain and the cows, bless their hearts, had been grinding away at a stringer of willows where a family of beaver was actively cutting. The Bishop, on the other hand, was there for the beaver. The oversized rodents had already plugged up the river’s main stem and were now working their way into his irrigation ditch. As head of the Mormon flock, he had an example to set. There was no room in Heaven for beaver. Across the river from Jack, wilted by the heat, and in the last years of his life, the Bishop stood confounded. “Goddamn willows” was all he was able to manage; a man’s feelings about willows being as clear a route to his true character as any other knowable quality. “You know what these goddamned willows are going to do, don’t you?” he finally exclaimed,

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HONORABLE MENTION making it clear that he was getting ready to preach. “Those willows are going to hold their ground in the next big flood and spread the water out. They’re going to catch all kinds of crap. If you don’t let my cows eat this stuff down, the river’s going to slow down, rise up out of its channel, change course, and flood this whole goddamn place.” Jack was stunned. The Bishop’s science was right on the money. That was exactly what was going to happen. It was the reason he lived there: the sheer possibility of wetlands in the desert. He loved the contrast of a desert river —

the magic of water — and he let himself be governed by visions of black hawks and wolves, beaver and otter. Of course, the Bishop’s priorities were different. To the Bishop, the river possessed no soul. He granted it no rights or ethical status and he did not know or care about the diversity of life that moved through its cottonwoods. What mattered to the Bishop was a steady flow of water into his irrigation ditch and his ability to apply its God-given magic to the production of beef cattle. Back home, Jack grabbed a beer and headed into the yard. Like the Bishop, he, too, had his thumb on the end of a hose. As lord god over half-an-acre of water and a bit of good soil, Jack was busy spreading pixie dust on the emergent. Most men, Jack thought, entered ecosystems like weeds, as destructive as the proverbial bull in a china shop. But, surely, he thought, it didn’t have to be that way. Instead, searching for a more comprehensive version of himself, Jack contended for a different future. He believed he could give back more than he took. In his world, heaven was filled with beaver. In his world, a man could choose to be a keystone species if

r o T k r e n u a r t T 4-6pm in the GRMC Main Parking lot fun, Music and goodie bags for your Goblin or Ghoul (While Supplies last) Schedule your Mammogram in October and enter to win a Gift basket in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. See your doctor, and then call (575) 538-4125 to schedule your Mammogram.

he wanted to. The yard, Jack’s pride and joy, was filled with native trees and shrubs, as well as berries, nut, and fruit trees, all under ten years old. When he and Eiseley had moved in a decade ago, it was nothing but tumbleweed; the previous owners apparently not inclined toward the nurturing of living things. Now, growing between the woody vegetation, grasses were thriving. Birds, lured by his brush piles and the steady decomposition of mulch, were nesting in his trees. Regularly, there was fox and skunk, ringtail and bobcat. At night, he and Eiseley sat in the tall grass and sang with coyotes. Jack knew his relationship with nature was complicated. Philosophically, he was a romantic existentialist. Beyond the cognitive trick of self-reflection, he knew that his love for the universe was one-sided, that the only thing the universe really offered in return was the possibility of existence. But, for Jack, that was enough. It was that kaleidoscopic potential that gave him goose bumps; the forces of attraction and organization that gave the gift of phenomenological emergence. Even without life the universe was in-

teresting to Jack, but with life in the mix, the universe appeared hungry. It was driven. Every owl and every mouse was striving as hard as it could to carry its banner into the future. The successful ones got to play their parts a fraction longer, but, to Jack, it was never about winning. It was the striving, the winning and the losing that, Jack knew, created the world. Jack turned the water off and smiled. He thought of California, watching pelicans along the coastal cliffs. The birds would fly the same speed and height as the noisy model airplanes all around them, only they would not turn around on command. Oh, wildness. Freedom and wildness; his beef with the Bishop was the same old thing: two men arguing over the definition of liberty. Where one saw liberty, the other saw tyranny, and vice versa. Jack chuckled to himself; he knew the irony, his devotion to wildness was just one of a thousand ways to ethically order the world. Alexander had fought for glory! Most people fight to pay the bills. Who was he to claim that

THE OMEN

continued on page 32

The 8th Annual Rope 4 Hope October 29th and 30th at the Baird Arena in Cliff, NM

Oct. 29th - Team Roping at 10 am Oct. 30th - Barrel Racing at 1:30 pm Spectators are more than welcome Barbeque Plates and basic concession stand fare for sale served by GRMC’s Cancer Center caregivers. There will be Raffles and a Silent Auction For more information go to rope4hope.org and please Like us on Facebook

Hope is the little voice you hear whis per “maybe” when it seem s the entire world is shou ting “no”!


32 • OCTOBER 2016

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THE OMEN

continued from page 31 his god, wildness, should live? Why, indeed, was everything better alive than dead? Why should he expect others to bow down to the fierce green fire in an old wolf’s eyes? For Jack, the answer was scale. He wanted not to care about the Bishop’s god. He wanted to live and let live. But, bloody hell, the climate was changing. On land, in the oceans, everywhere on earth, ecosystems were collapsing. He knew that the larger arc of life’s trajectory through time had been governed by random and punctuated mass extinction events, but this was different, we were ethical animals and self-reflective enough in our best moments to know the responsibility that we bore. The Earth was no longer our mother. We had outgrown that metaphor. It was a marriage now. Together, we were giving birth to the future. Jack thought of Eiseley, the way they played their fiddles together, the way she cared for their son and every other living thing. He felt no loss of freedom in his commitment to her. With her, the options were just different and the benefits exceeded the costs. Mostly, though, love was blind, and he didn’t even notice the costs. It was like that with wildness. Jack woke up early and took the dogs to the farm. He loved to watch them run. In southern California, he had walked the beaches with a neurotic cairn terrier, the two of them twisted and stunted by an endless string of garden apartments. It was different here. The farm next door was right along the river. It had been his playground for almost fifteen years. That first year, it was where he and Eiseley had landed when they made their escape from California. That they had fallen in love in Los Angeles the belly of the beast - still made him smile. He had found his angel while living in hell.

For 10 years, Jack had been irrigating the farm; both the permanent pastures full of cool season grasses, as well as the restoration area’s woodlands and wetlands that a decade ago were nothing but dirt. It was like watching Sea Monkeys grow. Cottonwoods and willows, a cattail marsh, flycatchers and cuckoos, chats and yellowthroats; it was nothing less than a miracle. It was what a free and wild river could do all on its own. In graduate school, Jack had met with the only professor he trusted, an ancient professor emeritus who believed mankind was tragically stuck between two worlds: one dying and the other helpless to be born. Restoration ecology was the only wisdom he offered, and Jack took it to heart. The farm was his personal restoration. He bent down and turned on the water. The river came to his bidding. The dogs chased the head of it down the ditch and Jack laughed. This water wouldn’t turn into steaks. It would rise up as cottonwoods, sycamores, and willows. It would sit like lead in the belly of a sharp-shinned hawk. Afterward, Jack took the dogs down to the river to check on the Great-horned Owls. He wasn’t sure where the nest had been that spring, but the owlets, last time he checked, were still roosting in the old Bosque. Five years ago, leading bird hikes on the farm, he had met the adult male for the first time. On that day, his only takers had been a mother and daughter who were both suffering from the tragic loss of a husband and bother. They were dazed by grief when the bird was found, roosting unusually low in a small walnut tree. The huge owl was set on a horizontal limb at an oblique angle to a strong, winter wind. His ear tufts and contour feathers were streaming to the side. He was so close that that there was no need for binoculars; overcome by the power of his presence, both women collapsed into tears.

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At the river, the dogs dug gophers, and swam, while Jack moved slowly into the presence of water. Though flowing, the water itself was inanimate, a crystal string of flexible molecules, happy to stick together, but more than willing to set out, on a moment’s notice, for a daring adventure. Taken up by life in the form of a riparian forest, the water had set out to do battle with gravity. Roots and stems stood their ground like an army against the catastrophic energy of the rare and violent floods. Life, ever optimistic, had claimed the land and it wouldn’t let go. Behind him, Jack could hear the piercing calls of Red-winged Blackbirds. The males, their epulates shining like jewels, were up and singing. The females were sitting on their woven nests with eggs pressed firmly against their brood patches. From sunlight to plant to insect to blackbird: the light from a star was passing directly through their skin. Moved by the beauty, Jack felt the rising sin of righteousness. The Bishop was stunted. Some men hated willows. Some men hated wolves. Men hated each other. It was the curse of ignorance; the burden of a species whose eusocial brain could both love and hate with reckless abandon. And he was no different. Jack was possessive. He loved the river. He loved his family. There were always limits to compassion.

2016 WRITING CONTEST • DOUGAN HALES

Dia de los Muertos 2010 Six votive candles alternating black and red. Six sisters draped in colors of the Tierra de los Muertos. Six wicks dance incandescently above luminous pools of wax. Hours of illuminating remembrances of my antepasados have drawn down the flames to the feet of the Most Holy

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2 01 6

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Sisters. A cool wee hour breeze draughts through the darkened room, stirring the guttering lights to a last devotional frenzy. Shadow play moves grim robed figures In a spastic sacred dance. Six haloed calaveras, skulls and hearts in hands, beckon me. Declining their invitations, I bend and blow out each wallowing flicker.

“Misshapen Bowls,” one of our tied poems, was penned by Randy Grisham and found by his wife Jackie who submitted it with a note saying he had passed away April 16, 2016.

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old book, Nature, tired, perhaps, of the storyline, or fearful maybe of the next chapter. Humanity had chosen to play monopoly with the planet. Fun for a while, but incompatible with physical reality, the potentialities of matter, and the living world that it had emerged from just as an apple emerges from a tree. People did not come into the world, they came out of it. That, on its own, should give them pause. Of course, the cuckoo’s story was their story too; they couldn’t just put it down. All they could do… all they had ever been able to do… was help in the writing. On the way back home a circling black hawk dropped a tail feather at Jack’s feet. He picked it up and stuck it in his hat. It was hot. The dogs were hungry. He had reports to write. He wanted to play his fiddle. When he came into the yard, Eiseley was hanging clothes on the line. “Did you see anything,” she asked. “Same old thing,” Jack said, “tanagers, cuckoos, orioles, vireos, flycatchers.” He showed her the feather. “Wow,” she said, “What do you suppose that means?” Jack thought about it. “I think it means that the bird is molting.” Eiseley laughed. “Scientist, don’t you know an omen when you see one? Maybe you were chosen.” “We’re all chosen,” said Jack, “that’s what it means to be human.”

Dougan Hales poem “Dia de los Muertos 2010,” tied in place with “Misshapen Bowls,” takes us right into the room with the candles and darkness to an eerie celebration.

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Even the Bishop knew that attachments led to sorrow. When the dogs finished their swim, they stretched out on the hot sand while Jack searched the floodplain for river cobble. Each time he came there, he added a few stones to the tall cairn that he had started long ago. Every stone in the cairn had been handpicked for pattern or color. There was no set rule except that it had to catch your eye. He built the cairn after the September 11th terror attacks because he wanted to make something beautiful near the spot he had been at the time. Here, next to the river, he had been watching a pair of cuckoos copulate as the towers fell. Through his binoculars, Jack had watched the male approach the female. When he mounted her, the graceful bird had stretched his neck around to the right so that their heads were side by side. As a gift, he offered her a twig that they held together while they mated. Unburdened, the river rolled on. Jack took off his shoes and walked down the river. With silt up to his shins he entered the cuckoo slough, feeling its coolness and its high humidity. A cuckoo does not fear the desert sun, Jack thought; it is consilient with Nature. Its story and Nature’s story are one. Jack felt the burden of consciousness. His own species had laid down that

2 01 6 HONORABLE MENTION

They may be plain or Glitzy and glamourous But like the people they are never perfect The bottom of the bowl is the soul This is where the source comes from as with people your Essence captured with In and speaks to all who see it.

The strongest color is always at the base of the person as well as the bottom of the Bowl and the color generates through the body to make the unit whole This is what I try to express with my misshapen bowls.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 33

TALKING HORSES • SCOTT THOMSON

Tasty Summer Leftovers

S

ummer is gone. Temperatures have cooled, flies have departed, horses are frisky and the sun feels less like a heat lamp. Without the roar of swamp coolers, fans and air conditioners we sleep better and wake up refreshed, ready to go. My favorite time of the year to work with horses. I stumbled on some pretty good gems this summer as I read various books, magazines heading for the recycle bin, or caught up on training and horse shows. Much of what I try to teach people about horses is based on philosophy and the nature of the horse, and the equally important role of the human, as opposed to specific training techniques, so I like to pass along interesting tidbits to provoke thought whenever I can. Early on, I was taught, and more importantly witnessed, the best riders, owners and trainers of horses were not the arrogant, opinionated, “I’ve been around horses all my life” driven types, the ones always quick to point out how much more they know than you do, but rather people who were humble, teachable, curious, and respectful of the horse at all times. No one will ever know all there is to know about these animals, and even the best in the business understand that in the end it’s the behavior of the human that drives the success of your journey with a horse. Along these lines, some comments that caught my eye. “You are not guaranteed success with horses if you work your tail off, but you are guaranteed NOT to have success if you don’t.” From Trevor Brazile, 23 time world champion cowboy. Makes me wonder why so many riders think they don’t have to constantly practice to improve their skills and help their horses. “Training horses is a lot like baking a cake, but the point which so many people fail to realize is that the ingredients have to be put into us, not into the horse.” From John Lyons. Do you really have the “ingredients” to help your horse? “He’s a great horse, but we’re taking our time developing him, reminding ourselves that patience is often the fastest route to success. He has all the tools necessary but now it’s really up to me.” From Jan Ebeling, a member of the U.S. Olympic Dressage team, speaking about his horse, Rassolini. Interesting. What the horse becomes depends on the skill, effort and commitment of the human. At any level, the horse can’t just do it on its own. “People always say a horse learns through repetition, but who needs the repetition? You and I do. To be good at anything, you need to practice and do it every day. Learn to use your tools, your ropes, your leads. Good horses and good handlers all come from the same place, good preparation.” From Craig

Cameron, talking about bringing along young horses in “Western Horseman.” “Many people do things with horses to achieve a specific goal but only by asking the horse to tolerate what is happening. It is far better to use patience and work in a way that leads to understanding and acceptance. In the end that will get you there faster and build a better foundation of trust for any future training challenges.” Trainer Jonathan Field talking about helping horses dealing with fear. A horse that is simply tolerating something has not really overcome his fear, and is therefore a lot less safe and predictable than the horse who has been patiently taught how to accept it. Your goals are not your horse’s goals, so best if you teach him based on his nature if you want to really solve the problem. “If you need to get professional help for yourself or your horse, remember it is just that, help. It is hiring someone to help you solve a problem and to teach you how to do it, not someone to do it for you.” From trainer Kat Swigart, answering a letter to the trainer in Equus magazine. A wonderful counter to the belief that someone else can program and fix your horse without your involvement, then just hand a perfect horse back to you. No amount of training can change the basic nature of the horse to live in the moment. They will always work to the level of the person handling them at a given moment in time, so resist the urge to blame breeders, trainers or former owners and make sure you’re up to the task of leading your horse. “My mare taught me that sometimes horses understand better than we do how to get where we’re going, and we can give them their heads much more often than we think.” From an owner story in “Equus.” I like that one. Listen to your horse. Trust him. Stop trying to micro-manage every step and you’ll both be happier. “As far as a rider is concerned the horse may not be doing the right thing – but as far as the horse is concerned he always is, for self-preservation is his inevitable motivation.” From Tom Dorrance in his invaluable book, “True Unity.” When you’re getting results not to your liking or behavior you don’t want, turn the lens on yourself first to critique your communication and leadership before you blame the horse or other factors. “About 90% of horse to horse disagreements within the herd are settled without physical contact. Their language, based on reading body language, is seventy million years old and is universal, understood by horses worldwide. Our language is less than 2 million years old and we need an interpreter when we travel to a foreign land.” From the book “For the Good of the Horse” by Mary Wanless. Is it

any wonder that we confuse and frustrate our horses by trying to get results with words or the constant use of direct physical contact or force? They’re a non-verbal species. Learn their language. “A horse will find a joy in submission which horses who have been coaxed or bullied into their contact with humans cannot share.” From Monty Roberts, talking about joining up with a horse. Start things respectful of the horse’s view of the world and things will go much better. “The principle of segmented goals makes a tremendous difference in teaching a horse. The more steps you can break the goal down into, the faster you will get there even though it appears you’re traveling more slowly. To put our final goal in front of the horse first is as ridiculous as presenting pre-school children with the classics of English literature and expecting them to read.” Paraphrasing John Lyons and his discussion of trailer loading, where the focus is on teaching the horse to load, not just getting him in a trailer. Your horse should determine the pace of his learning, not you. Finally, “consider the place our two species occupy on the continuum of animals, arranged between the extremes of the most likely to flee (mostly herbivores) and those most likely to fight (mostly carnivores). Only deer and antelope are more flighty than horses, but no creature on earth is more prone to fighting than man. We have attacked virtually every species in existence, including our own. Yet when most predators have eaten their fill, they can peacefully coexist with their prey (witness the big cats in Africa living on the plains with antelope, a primary food source). But man, the predominant predator on the planet, cannot resist tormenting the horse, even after our bellies are full. We eat our big meals, then still go out and ask our horses to carry us around the countryside, compete in events or pull a plow. The big cats only torment their prey when hungry, but we can’t just leave the poor horse alone.” From “For the Good of the Horse” by Mary Wanless. Never really thought about things like that before, but maybe that explains why it’s such a challenge to develop a horse to live in our world, and why things don’t always go the way we want. It all rests on our shoulders, and that’s a heavy load for the ultimate predator that only sees things our way. Scott Thomson lives in Silver City and teaches natural horsemanship and foundation training. You can contact him at hsthomson@msn.com of 575-388-1830.

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(575) 388-4251 3201 Ridge Loop, Silver City (on 32nd St up the hill from the Hospital) • Natural Childbirth, including water birth With prenatal, postpartum & newborn care • Primary care for the whole family

Medicaid, Insurance and affordable payments accepted Mon-Fri 9-5:30 Walk-Ins Welcome Shauna McCosh CNM, FNP www.laclinicanm.org


34 • OCTOBER 2016

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Silver City Zen Center (Ginzan-ji Zen Buddhist Temple) Meditation Practice (Zazen)

Monday-Friday 6:30-7:00 am

Zazen & Dharma Talk

Saturday 9:00 am

Informal Dharma

Call for Retreat Schedule

Resident Priest

Rev. Dr. Oryu Paul Stuetzer

SUNDAYS

Archaeology Society — First Sunday of every month, field trip. 536-3092, whudson43@yahoo.com.

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575-388-8874

Rosen Method Bodywork Relaxation & Inner Awareness through Gentle Touch

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MONDAYS

AARP Widowed and Single Persons of Grant County — Second Monday, 10:30 a.m. Cross Point Assembly of God Church. All singles welcome. Contact Sally, 537-3643. Al-Anon family group, New Hope —12:05 p.m. First Presbyterian Church, 1915 Swan, Silver City. Contact: Jerry, 575-534-4866; Matt, 575-313-0330; Diana 575-574-2311. Open meeting. Art Class — 9-10:45 a.m. Silver City Senior Citizen Center. Beginners to advanced. Contact Jean 5192977. Gentle Yoga — 5:30-6:56 p.m. Lotus Center at 211 W. Broadway, Becky Glenn, 404-234-5331. Mom & Baby Yoga — 5:30-6:30 p.m. La Clinica Health & Birth Center, 3201 Ridge Loop. 388-4251. Free to patients, $5 for non-patients. Republican Party of Grant County — Second Monday, 6 p.m. at 3 Rio de Arenas Road (the old Wrangler restaurant). Silver City Squares — Dancing 7-9 p.m. Presbyterian Church, 1915 N. Swan St. Kay, 388-4227, or Linda, 534-4523.

TUESDAYS

Certified Reflexologist - 23yrs. Celebrate.CelebrateItAll@gmail.com Silver City – By Appointment

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Alzheimer’s/Dementia Support — First Tuesday, 1:30 p.m. Senior Center. Margaret, 388-4539. Bayard Historic Mine Tour — Second Tuesday, meet at Bayard City Hall, 800 Central Ave., by 9:30 a.m. $5 fee covers two-hour bus tour of historic mines plus literature and map; call 537-3327 for reservation. Compassionate Friends — Fourth Tuesday, 7 p.m. Support for those who’ve lost a child. Episcopal Church, Parish Hall, Seventh and Texas St. Mitch Barsh, 534-1134. Figure/Model Drawing — 4-6 p.m. Contact Sam, 388-5583. Gilawriters — 2-4 p.m. Silver City Public Library. Trish Heck, trish.heck@gmail.com, 534-0207. Multiple Sclerosis Support Group — First Tuesday, 11:30 a.m. at local restaurant; email for this month’s location: huseworld@yahoo.com. PFLAG Silver City — First Tuesday, 5:30-7 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House. Confidential support for LGBTQ persons, their families and friends. 575-5908797. Slow Flow Yoga — 11:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m. Lotus Center at 211 W. Broadway, Becky Glenn, 404-2345331. Southwest New Mexico Quilters Guild – First Tuesday, 9:30 a.m. at the Grant County Extension Office, 2610 N. Silver Street, North Entrance. Newcomers and visitors are welcome. 575-388-8161. Tai Chi for Better Balance — 10:45 a.m., Senior Center. Call Lydia Moncada to register, 575-5340059.

WEDNESDAYS

Al-Anon family group — 6 p.m. at Arenas Valley Church of Christ, 5 Race Track Road, Arenas Valley (the old radio station). Contact: Tom, 575-956-8731; Karen 575-313-7094; Dot, 575-654-1643. Open meeting. Archaeology Society — Third Wednesday of every month, October-November, January-April 7 p.m. Silver City Women’s Club. Summers 6 p.m. location TBA. 536-3092, whudson43@yahoo.com. Back Country Horsemen — Second Wednesday, 6 p.m. Gila Regional Medical Center Conference Room. Subject to change. 574-2888. Bayard Al-Anon — 6 p.m. Bayard Housing Authority, 100 Runnels Drive 313-7094. A Course in Miracles — 7:15 p.m., 600 N. Hudson. Information, 534-9172 or 534-1869. Curbside Consulting — Free for nonprofits. 9 a.m.noon. Wellness Coalition, 409 N. Bullard, Lisa Jimenez, 534-0665, ext. 232, lisa@wellnesscoalition.org. Gin Rummy — 1 p.m. Yankie Creek Coffee House. Grant County Democratic Party — Second Wednesday, potluck at 5:30 p.m., meeting at 6:30 p.m. Sen. Howie Morales’ building, 3060 E. Hwy. 180.

Ladies Golf Association — 8 a.m. tee time. Silver City Golf Course. Lego Club — Ages 4-9. 4 p.m. Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave., 538-3672. Prenatal Yoga — 5:30-6:30 p.m. at La Clinica Health & Birth Center, 3201 Ridge Loop. 388-4251. Free to patients, $5 for non-patients. Prostate Cancer Support Group — Third Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Gila Regional Medical Center Conference Room. 388-1198 ext. 10. Storytime — all ages. 10:30 a.m. Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave., 538-3672.

THURSDAYS

ARTS Anonymous — 5:30 p.m. Artists Recovering through the 12 Steps. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 3845 N. Swan St. 534-1329. De-stressing Meditations — 12-12:45 p.m. New Church of the SW Desert, 1302 Bennett St. 3134087. Grant County Rolling Stones Gem and Mineral Society — Second Thursday, 6 p.m. Senior Center, 204 W. Victoria St. Kyle, 538-5706. Group Meditation — 5:30-6:15 p.m. with Jeff Goin at the Lotus Center. 388-4647. Historic Mining District & Tourism Meeting — Second Thursday, 10 a.m. Bayard Community Center, 290 Hurley Ave., Bayard. 537-3327. Tai Chi for Better Balance — 10:45 a.m., Senior Center. Call Lydia Moncada to register, 575-5340059. TOPS — 5 p.m. First Presbyterian Church, 1915 Swan, 538-9447. Vinyasa Flow Yoga — 11:30 a.m. Lotus Center at 211 W. Broadway, Becky Glenn, 404-234-5331. Yoga class — Free class taught by Colleen Stinar. 1-2 p.m. Episcopal Church fellowship hall, Seventh and Texas.

FRIDAYS

Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group — First Friday, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at Hidalgo Medical Center. Ask at the front desk for the room number. 575-388-4539. Overeaters Anonymous — 7 p.m. at First United Methodist Church. 575-654-2067. Silver City Woman’s Club — Second Friday, 10:30 a.m., lunch is at noon, 411 Silver Heights Blvd. Kathleen at 538-3452. Taizé — Second Friday. Service of prayer, songs, scripture readings and quiet contemplation. 6:30 p.m. Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, 538-2015. Woodcarving Club — First and third Fridays except holidays. 1 p.m. Senior Center. 313-1518. Youth Space — 5:30-10 p.m. Loud music, video games, chill out. Satellite/Wellness Coalition.

SATURDAYS

Alcoholics Anonymous Beginners — 6 p.m. Lions Club, Eighth & Bullard (entrance at Big Ditch behind Domino’s). Newcomers and seasoned members welcome. Alcoholics Anonymous “Black Chip” —11 a.m. to noon, at First United Methodist Church. Blooming Lotus Meditation — 12:45 p.m. Lotus Center at 211 W. Broadway, 313-7417, geofarm@ pobox.com. Double Feature Blockbuster Mega Hit Movie Night — 5:30-11 pm. Satellite/Wellness Coalition. Evening Prayer in the Eastern Orthodox Tradition — 5 p.m. Theotokos Retreat Center, 5202 Hwy. 152, Santa Clara. 537-4839, theotokos@zianet.com. Kids Bike Ride — 10 a.m., Bikeworks, 815 E. 10th St. Dave Baker, 388-1444. Narcotics Anonymous — 6 p.m. New 180 Club, 1661 Hwy. 180 E. Spinning Group — First Saturday, 1-3 p.m. Yada Yada Yarn, 614 N. Bullard, 388-3350. Storytime — all ages. 10:30 a.m. Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave., 538-3672. Vinyasa Flow Yoga — 10 a.m. All levels. Lotus Center at 211 W. Broadway, Becky Glenn, 404-234-5331. All phone numbers are area code 575 except as noted. Send updates to events@desertexposure. com.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 35

Personnel belongings carried out to a driveway need to dry out from disaster flooding in Denham Springs, Louisiana. (Photos by Daniel Fresquez)

The U.S. Rotary Club sponsors disaster relief services for thousands of residents that needed to empty out their homes.

ON A MISSION • JOAN E. PRICE

Weird Mountains of Trash

Climate change, relief work in Louisiana intersect

A

s Daniel Fresquez headed east into the night from El Paso to Austin on Aug. 17, Louisiana was in crisis. Frequez went to throw his carpentry skills into volunteer relief work for thousands of families inundated by historic flooding in Louisiana. Austin was the contact point for volunteers to fan out into the devastated regions. As he drove, communities worked at recovering as best they could. Fresquez was assigned to Denham Springs, one of the hardest hit by flood waters. Open Door Baptist Church and families were already returning to their upscale neighborhoods of Lakegrove subdivision in Denham Springs after five days, where relentless storm water had unleashed “a thousand-year rain event,” according to news reports. Regional place names such as River Runs, Lakecrest, Greenwell Springs, Springfield, Denham Springs and Old River Road sprinkle the map with historic natural water features and the general belief was the weather comes in cycles — though they had not seen anything like this in 40 years. Frequez, a native of El Paso and retired from a career in environmental science in Los Angeles, found himself at flood ground zero by Saturday, seated at an information table under a small tent in the parking lot of a shopping center in Baton Rouge. The lot was an island of pavement surrounded by saturated ground. He worked with volunteers organized by the Austin Disaster Relief Network of some 140 churches. Frequez slept on a cot in the gymnasium of a “mega church” each evening in an environment hovering around 94 degrees and, in outlying regions pulling out from under the inundation of water, it was worse. On Sunday, the temperature was 87 degrees and felt like 100. Fresquez processed the steady stream of refugees, listening to their accounts, taking informa-

Operation Blessings, a Christian relief organization of 140 churches, set up centers for training volunteers, cash gifts, distribution of food vouchers, blankets and much more throughout the disaster flood areas. tion, offering support and prayer circles, and giving them carts with “immediate relief gift cards of $100 to $200,” with directions to the nearby warehouse where donations were pouring in with emergency items ranging from toothbrushes to blankets, food and water. He noticed poorer people seemed to be slower. When they did arrive, they had more trouble filling out the paperwork. Later, he noticed many had gone ahead and were gutting their own homes because the faster people got relief services earlier. “Everybody said yes to prayers,” he said. “Everywhere we go and meet with people, spontaneous prayer circle are held.” Fresquez said he worries about rising racial tensions and other social divides such as the gap between the rich and the poor that he sees in the country. “There have been so many problems in this country bringing out racial tensions — the flood is bringing people together,” he said. “White and black, multiracial, mixed culture and mixed economics — people are helping each other out.” In that part of the country at the mouth of the Mississippi River, everyone has a boat. Fresquez said numerous community members

picked people up and took them to higher ground. In his role as crew chief, Fresquez directed college students coming in from all over the country. Some pulled out saturated housing furniture and personal belongings; some pulled out saturated sheetrock to the roads for removal. Louisiana Health Secretary Rebekah McGee said the best course for many with structurally sound homes is to rip everything out and start all over, tearing out foundational materials like sheetrock, insulation, plaster, paneling, ceiling tiles, carpet and padding, because mold removal is a top priority. Fresquez said there was no television to watch, no radios and few cell phones to find out if the world was watching this climate shock. The water had short circuited every single thing with an electrical component including cell phone chargers, appliances, toys, car batteries and starter engines. The elderly were overwhelmed, there were houses where people just walked away, and the crew needed crowbars to try to clear out metal cabinets filled with swollen comic books too heavy to carry to the sidewalks, recounted Fresquez. “People around here are very familiar with mold — you can’t leave your house closed up for

more than a month or you have to clean large black roundish splotches that feed off the cellulose in the sheetrock and grow fast,” Fresquez said. “The moisture was so high the spores for the molds couldn’t dry out and spread in the air to be inhaled into people’s lungs producing really bad infections, terrible coughs. These mold infections are resistant to antibiotics.”

The volunteers drank water, Gatorade and other drinks constantly as sweat poured off their bodies, day after day, pulling out soggy floppy sheetrock and foul smelling rugs. Residents came and went from rows of substantial red brick homes on acre lots in Lakegrove piling their bedsteads and mattresses, lamps, chairs, pillows, cabinetry, couches and stuffed black garbage bags as if a huge soggy garage sale was in progress. People put up signs with their soggy mountains of home furnishings saying “You loot we shoot.” While Fresquez didn’t see any looting, he did see many “valuables” thrown out — but when people came along picking out salvageable things, the police would tell them to move along. “Many people did not want others to get their things,” he said. “One woman put a sign on her refrigerator door ‘Don’t Open-Inside Is the Dead.’” A longer view of climate disas-

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36 • OCTOBER 2016

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CYCLES OF LIFE • FR. GABRIEL ROCHELLE

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hear motorists complaining about cyclists. Some of the complaints are unwarranted, like “they don’t belong on the roads.” Not true, of course, since cyclists were first to campaign for paved roads in America and we’ve been on them for more than a century. Some complaints are definitely warranted, however, because too many cyclists disregard traffic laws to their own detriment. The most common infraction, which angers seasoned cyclists as much as motorists, is riding on the wrong side of the street. I have ridden home at night with the flow of traffic, and here comes someone riding toward me on the wrong side. This is a dangerous situation for me as cyclist. Which way to turn to avoid the oncoming cyclist? Which way will he turn? Is there clear roadway to move out into without endangering myself from cars coming behind in the lane? The long-term solution: everyone, ride on the right side of the road! Unfortunately, the problem is often complicated because that oncoming cyclist has no lights. Simply put: do not ride at night without lights. Make sure you are illuminated. Wear a fluorescent vest that will show your presence as well. Excellent bike lighting systems are for sale, and they are improving all the time. Buy one. Add even more lights. It’s the law

to have a headlight that projects five hundred feet and, preferably, a taillight that does the same. Randomly blinking lights attract more attention, too, and the systems you can buy offer that feature. It’s about safety. Helmets are required for minors, not for adults. But cyclists court disaster riding without a helmet. It is foolish not to wear one. I have always found it useful to mount a rear-view mirror on my helmet as well. Both helmet and mirror have saved me from disaster on more than one occasion. Cyclists may legally ride two abreast in the roadway in New Mexico, but it is usually prudent to ride single-file when cars approach from the rear. It’s a courtesy those who ride in clubs observe so we don’t impede traffic from behind. Cyclists have the same rights as motorists. We ride in the lane, but “as near to the right side of the roadway as practicable” (quoting from the laws). We are considered “vulnerable users” of the roadways, which means that motorists can be fined for harassing or intimidating us. Unfortunately, police are rarely right there when you get harassed, but at least the law’s on the books. Most people who read this column may not remember hand signals. We used them before turn signals were universal on cars. Cyclists are required by

law to use them. To signal a left turn, extend your left arm and point. To signal a right turn, left arm out with forearm upward – or you can extend your right arm, but this may confuse motorists who think you’re pointing at something off the side of the road. To signal a stop, left arm extended with forearm pointed down and palm facing backward. Use these signals one hundred feet before a turn left or right or, if possible, stopping. They help you to avoid trouble. Lastly the hard news: since we have the rights of motorists, we also have the responsibilities. This means stopping at stop signs and red lights. The law in New Mexico is that you must come to a stop and put one foot down before proceeding. I know that most seasoned cyclists fudge these laws, slowing for stop signs and yielding at red lights, but you can be fined for disobeying them. Proceed at your own risk, is all I can say. Be safe and not sorry. Fr. Gabriel Rochelle is pastor of St Anthony of the Desert Orthodox Mission, Las Cruces, an avid cyclist and secretary for Velo Cruces, the local advocacy committee; see Velocruces.org. The church is at http://stanthonylc.org.

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ters in Louisiana suggests they have created a sophisticated rapid response — and an economy at the mouth of the mighty Mississippi River. Louisiana has received millions of FEMA dollars going back to 2000 according to FOX Business News. Three hurricanes, four tropical storms and more severe weather events generated $106 million relief dollars in a sort of climate disaster economy even before Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita descended within a month of each other in 2005. Federal dollars are doubled in this economy by private support and volunteer work. Katrina and Rita changed federal emergency response involvement in a radical way. Almost a million individuals applied for assistance and the federal government gave out over $13.3 billion in response to Katrina and another $680 million for Rita less than four weeks later. Millions more federal and private dollars have gone to assist residents of Louisiana in eight storm flood events and three more hurricanes, Hurricane Ike and Gustave in Sept of 2008 and Hurricane Isaac in 2012 — until now, the worst climate disaster since Hurricane Sandy in New York, requiring millions more from FEMA

Volunteers and residents gut homes in 100-degree heat and humidity that saturated safety masks making them useless while sweat poured down their faces and bodies. as the numbers of applicants continue to rise. In the midst of the total loss of home and possessions among over 70,000 people, Fresquez, a scientist and a Catholic, is well aware of the science behind carbon emissions driving climate change. At one home, he casually mentioned that “this was one more example of climate change.” But an educated wife of a police chaplain responded going into detail about the theory that this was a result of a 12 year cycle of sunspot activity.

A recent poll found that 63 percent of U.S. adults and 68 percent of Catholic adults say they believe it is their personal moral responsibility to do what they can to combat climate change while 72 percent believe society should take steps to combat climate change. Majorities of all religious sub-groups believe society should be taking steps to combat climate change whether they were Catholic, Evangelical, or other Christian affiliation. Non-Christian numbers were noticeably similar according to research done out of the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University. Evangelical Christians are most likely to agree that God has played a role with more than four in ten in an open ended response responding “yes” (46 percent), with responses such as “All changes are part of His plan. We do not need to know, or even understand the plan.” With replacements on the way, Fresquez, with a broken tooth requiring a diet of soft foods for days as he headed out each morning to create weird mountains of trash, returned to El Paso. “People really needed our help,” he said. “It was a rewarding and life-changing experience. I almost want to go back.”


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 37

IN THE CARDS • JOHN RANDALL

Learn to Play Bridge Game keeps brain active

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hen I was 12 my mother let me sit at the bridge table in the living room as she prepared dinner. While she was cooking I would be the “dummy” (French for silent) and play the cards as Declarer called. Now, 60 years later (gulp), I look back and realize playing bridge has been one of the joys of my life. It’s not just the decision making and problem solving that the game provides, more important, it’s the social aspect of the game: friends made, tournaments attended, clubs visited and owned, including a club we started in our 5-year stay in Costa Rica that met on Tuesday afternoons in the back of a local bar. When we made the decision to return to the States we had three places we wanted to visit to see if retirement 3.0 made sense — Hendersonville, North Carolina; San Angelo, Texas; and Las Cruces, New Mexico. Las Cruces was the first place we visited. We haven’t visited the other two cities yet. Why? It’s because of the Belton Bridge Center in Las Cruces and its friendly players — the club has games five days a week starting at 12:30 p.m. and ending around 3:45 p.m. Bridge players of all skill levels play in the games. We’ve made the decision to settle here in the Mesilla Valley. This past month my wife of 50 years and I attended the Summer Nationals sponsored by the American Contract Bridge League; more than 2,000 bridge players attended. During the week I became certified to present the Learn Bridge in a Day seminar. On Saturday, Oct. 22 I will be presenting the Learn Bridge in a

Day class at the Belton Bridge Center in Las Cruces. The 5-hour seminar from 10 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. will include a light lunch and is offered free of charge, as are all education classes. In addition we’ll announce a four-week follow-on class to be taught on Thursday mornings 9:30-11:30 a.m. and Saturday mornings at the same time; free of charge. Pre-registration is required. E-mail me at puravidabridge@yahoo.com or call 786-338-5970. The Belton Bridge Center is located at 1214 E. Madrid Ave.

Why play bridge? It will improve your mental sharpness. Staying active physically is important as you age, but exercising the brain can also have important health benefits. A 2014 study conducted by the Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center found that participants who reported playing memory games at least every other day performed better on standard memory tests compared to those who played less frequently. The study assessed 329 older adults who were free of dementia, but at increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease based on family history.

Trumping Alzheimer’s According to the Alzheimer’s Association, the number of people with the disease may nearly triple to 16 million by 2050, barring the development of medical breakthroughs to prevent, slow or stop the disease. For older individuals, getting involved in social and cognitively stimulating activities, such as the game of bridge, is more important than

People gather at Belton Bridge Center in Las Cruces to learn and enjoy a game of bridge. (Courtesy Photo) ever. “In our study, we found that individuals who participated more frequently in activities such as card games, checkers and crossword puzzles have increased brain volume in areas that stimulate memory and affect the development of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Ozioma Okonkwo, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Bridge The card game of bridge is one of the world’s most popular games of skill and memory. It also develops math and social skills as the players deal the cards, create a contract, play the hand and score the results. According to the American Contract Bridge League (ACBL), an estimated 25 million people in the U.S. play the game socially in clubs or homes, competitively at tournaments and even online. Many ACBL members are senior citizens who have been playing at local bridge clubs for most of their lives, such as 103-year-old Lily Hansen of Ludington, Michigan. Hansen, who serves as a director of her club, told AARP Bulletin that play-

John Randall welcomes a fellow bridge player to join him at the table. (Courtesy Photo) ing twice a week helps her stay sharp and active. She has been playing bridge for nearly nine decades. “Duplicate (bridge) is competitive,” she said. “It keeps your brain working. I honestly believe that.” With more than 167,000 members and 3,200 clubs nationwide, the ACBL offers a number of programs developed to make learn-

ing the game simple. Visit ACBL’s website at learn.ACBL.org for information on how to play. In Las Cruces the club is located at 1214 E. Madrid Ave. Go to www.lascrucesbridge.com for a list of the directors for the daily games. Call the director and ask if you can observe the game as it is being played or if you have played bridge before call and ask the director to find you a partner.


38 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

H IGH PLACES • GABRIELE TEICH

Bluff Springs

Finding old time treasures in the mountains

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Exploring the trail in the area of Bluff Springs yields peaceful moments on old roads. (Photos by Gabriele Teich)

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Saints Peter & Paul Lutheran Mission (ELDoNA) invites the Silver City community to hear the Gospel of Christ purely taught in its traditional, historical, orthodox Christian context. Currently meeting on the 2nd and 4th Sundays of the month at 3 PM at StarDancers Studio, 2662 Pinos Altos Rd., Silver City. Call or visit our website to confirm times and dates. (575) 636-4988 peterandpaullutheran.org. Rev. Paul Rydecki, Pastor.

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icture a year-round waterfall feeding a small stream meandering through a green meadow dotted with wildflowers and surrounded on all sides by mountains covered in tall pine trees. If that doesn’t sound like New Mexico to you, you are not alone. Few people have this image in mind when they think of our Southwest state. Yet it is true, such treasures can be found — if one knows where to look. Described above is a National Forest recreational area called Bluff Springs. It is located off the Sunspot Highway near Cloudcroft in the Sacramento Mountains. And if you are looking for a beautiful, leisurely hike in higher altitude (to escape the hot summer temperatures or maybe to cross country ski in winter), this might be just right for you. The trail system here has been developed from the old railroad system that existed in the mountains around Cloudcroft from 1898 until 1947 to haul timber down from the mountains. And – lucky for us today – trains could not travel steep up or downhill, therefore the trails move ever so gently up through pine, spruce, and aspen forest. While Las Cruces had 100 degrees or more, up there it was barely hitting 80 – very pleasant for a hike in July. We chose trail No. 112 which starts at the Bluff Springs waterfall and merges with trail No. 113 after half a mile. Following that we came upon a meadow covered in wildflowers and as many butterflies as you can ever wish for. The trail makes a sharp turn left there — we assume trains had to switchback to get onto the higher grade here. The promised bubbly spring next to the trail was only a marshy fleck when we came upon it. Good that we took enough water to see us through the hike. The trail then intersected with trail No. 5008, which we took to the left. At another sharp turn we opted to go straight ahead instead — a dead end road, as the sign told us. But what a treasure trove this dead end was: old rail road spikes, nuts, screws, washers and rusty pieces of metal could be found all over. The kids were in railroad heaven. The return on the same trail seemed much shorter, as it

The Cloud Climbing Railroad in the area of Cloudcroft still has treasure left to find in the Sacramento Mountains.

Wildflowers and butterflies, always in the way in the mountains. so often does. But mountain weather can change in a heartbeat. Our campsite was almost in sight when it started to rain slightly. With our hail experience of the previous trip still fresh in mind, we fashioned our raincoats and hurried back. Sitting in our camper, the rain became heavier and some hail was in the mix. We considered ourselves lucky for the dry spot. Hubby reminded us that the pop-up camper was not particularly safe in a thunderstorm, so we counted the seconds between lightning and thunder. It stayed above 30 seconds — lightning and thunder were more than 6 miles away. (Sound travels about one mile in five seconds). We were safe. This hike took us about three

and a half hours and was five and a halfmiles long, according to the guide book (Hiking New Mexico, Laurence Parent, 2011, Falcon Guides). Many other longer and shorter hikes are possible in the immediate vicinity of Bluff Springs. If you go: Take not only sunscreen, hats and enough water, but also remember a rain cover — and check the forecast before you go. To get to the trailhead: In Cloudcroft turn right onto the Cox Canyon Highway and another right to Sunspot Highway. Take The Upper Rio Peñasco Road to the left and follow that road (through a patch of private land) until you come to the parking lot of Bluff Springs. You can see the waterfall to your right.

Mountain fields fill with flowers following rain.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 39

RED OR GREEN • ADRIANA M. CHAVEZ

Hot Pairings

Food experts offer tips for chile with wine, beer

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n the late summer and early fall, the air in New Mexico is scented with roasted green chile enticing residents and visitors to give into their cravings of chile rellenos, enchiladas and other chile-based dishes. But what should you pair with entrees brimming with chile goodness? Two food experts at New Mexico State University have offered their takes on what beers and wines pair best with chile. Professor Stuart Munson-McGee, a faculty member in the NMSU College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences Family and Consumer Sciences Department, teaches food science courses and researches wine and beer making techniques. He prefers the flavor of chile over spice, which is why he reaches for a beer or wine that will complement the flavors in a chile entree. “What complements something like that is a nice, malty beer, which also helps cut the spice because of the high alcohol content,” Munson-McGee said. “I like a Scottish ale that is wee heavy, or a dopplebock that is malty.” If you prefer a beer that will contrast with the flavor of a chile entree, Munson-McGee suggests choosing a Northwest-style IPA

Veracruz-Style Fish (Pescado A La Veracruzana) Ingredients 3 tablespoons olive oil, divided 4 6-ounce tilapia fillets or other white fish fillet Salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 small onion, chopped 4 garlic cloves, minced 1 1/2 cups canned crushed tomatoes with juice 1 roasted green chile, peeled, stemmed, seeded and cut into thin strips 1 bay leaf 1 teaspoon dried oregano 1/2 cup pitted and halved green olive 1/4 cup capers, drained Directions Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. In a medium saute pan, heat 1 tablespoon of the olive oil over medium-high heat. Season the fish fillets on both sides with salt and black pepper, to taste. Saute the fillets until they are opaque and just cooked through, about two minutes per side. Transfer the fish to a glass baking dish where they fit snugly. In the same saute pan, heat the remaining two tablespoons of olive oil over medium-high heat. Add the onion and garlic and cook until the onion is translucent, about five minutes. Add the tomatoes, green chile, bay leaf and oregano and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to medium, cover and let the sauce simmer until the chiles soften, about six minutes. Uncover the pan, add the olives and capers, and cook until the flavors combine, about four minutes. Season the sauce with salt and pepper, to taste. Pour the sauce over the fish in the baking dish. Bake until the fish is heated through, about five minutes. Remove the dish from the oven, discard the bay leaf and serve.

that is very hoppy and bitter, as opposed to an East Coast IPA, which is maltier. As far as wine is concerned, Munson-McGee said, it can depend on the social situation as well as the food, but he tends to disagree with many wine experts’ suggestions regarding chile and wine pairings. “Drink what you like,” Munson-McGee said, “Traditionally, experts suggest a merlot to go with spicy food, but I like fruity, full-bodied red wines and blends. I have very good friends who like white, fruity wines that provide an interesting contrast to a chile entree. Red wine would be a complement.” Chef John Hartley, an assistant professor in the School of Hotel, Restaurant and Tourism Management at NMSU, has experience planning dinner menus based on chile dishes and wine or beer. “Typically as a chef I will choose the food and then choose a beverage that would complement it,” Hartley said. “Green chile and beer go very well together, but it depends on the dish. If it’s something with a lot a cheese, then you need something fairly strong to compete with the oils and robustness of the dish. If it’s something like a steak Tampico, for example, I would pair it with milder selections.”

Hartley said the richer and stronger the flavors in a dish, the more robust the beverage has to be to compete. “If the flavors of the food are stronger, then you don’t get to appreciate the flavor of the alcohol, and vice versa,” Hartley said. “When pairing foods and beverages, my first choice is to match the level of robustness of the food with the beverage. They need to be at the same level of intensity.” Beyond wine and beer is up to the person. Munson-McGee said while he prefers to enjoy spirits and liquors after dinner, it depends on the social occasion, such as enjoying a margarita with chips and salsa after work. However, Hartley said most mixed drinks can be enjoyed with chile, but would not pair gin with chilebased entrees. “The juniper in gin and chile are not complementary flavors, kind of like cilantro and rosemary don’t go well together,” Hartley said. “I have done a dinner with one of my favorite whiskeys. Vodka goes with everything. And the traditional is tequila.” Here are some of Hartley’s favorite chile-based recipes, which can be paired with your favorite wine, beer or liquor.

Mexican-Style Sparerib Yields: 4 main dish servings Ingredients 1 cup firmly packed fresh cilantro leaves and stems 1/2 small onion, thinly sliced 4 cloves garlic, crushed with garlic press 1 pickled jalapeño chile 1/2 cup fresh lime juice 1/4 cup fresh orange juice 1/4 cup tequila 1 tablespoon olive oil 2 tablespoons sugar 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano 3 pounds pork spareribs Directions Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. In a blender, combine cilantro, onion, garlic, pickled jalapeño, lime and orange

juices, tequila, oil, sugar, and oregano, and puree until smooth. Place spareribs in nonreactive roasting pan just large enough to hold them in single layer. Pour cilantro mixture over ribs, turning to coat well. Roast, turning ribs twice, 1 hour 30 minutes. Increase oven temperature to 450 degrees F and roast ribs until very tender and richly colored, about 20 minutes longer. Transfer ribs to warm platter. Skim and discard fat from sauce remaining in pan and spoon sauce over ribs. Makes four main-dish servings. (Recipes courtesy of Chef John Hartley, New Mexico State University)

Caldo Tlalpeño Ingredients 8 cups chicken broth 1 1/4-pound whole chicken breast with skin and boned 1 onion, halved lengthwise and sliced thin lengthwise 1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil 2 carrots, cut into 1/8-inchthick sliced 1 zucchini, cut into 1/4-inchthick sliced 19-ounce can chickpeas, rinsed and drained 2 cans whole chipotle chilies in adobo, drained, rinsed, seeded and cut into strips 1 avocado for garnish 8 lime wedges for garnish Directions In a large saucepan, bring the broth just to a boil. Poach the chicken in the broth at a bare simmer for 15 minutes, or until the chicken is just cooked through. Remove the pan from the heat and let the chicken cool in the broth. Transfer the chicken to a cutting board, reserving the

broth, and discard the skin and bones. Shred the chicken and reserve it, cover and chill. In a large heavy saucepan, cook the onion in the oil over moderate heat, stirring, until it is softened. Stir in the carrots and zucchini, and cook the mixture, stirring for one minute. Add the reserved broth to the vegetable mixture with the chickpeas and simmer the soup for eight minutes, or until the carrots are just tender. The soup and the chicken may be prepared up to this point a day in advance and kept covered and chilled. Stir the reserved chicken into the soup with the chilies and salt and pepper to taste, simmer the soup gently until the chicken is heated through and divide it among 8 bowls. Garnish each serving with some of the avocado, peeled, pitted, and sliced, and a lime wedge.

Two food experts at New Mexico State University offer thoughts on what beers and wines pair best with chile. The consensus? Drink what you like. (NMSU photo by Darren Phillips)

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DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 41

TABLE TALK • LUCY WHITMARSH

Tapas Tree Grill Celebrates a Year

T

apas Tree Grill, located in “The Hub” Courtyard in downtown Silver City celebrated its first year of operation on Saturday, Sept. 3. In celebration the restaurant offered giveaways during the Labor Day Weekend and participated in the Annual Taste of Downtown Silver City. The “taste” they offered was a Bahn Mi slider, a classic Vietnamese street food. The slider ingredients are: Vietnamese pulled pork, pickled vegetables, cucumber, cilantro and jalapenos. Owners, David Chapman (chef and food manager) and Kevin Hubbs, (business manager) were very pleased with the Taste of Downtown because the event brought people in who had not been to their business previously. Street food is usually ethnic finger food that can be eaten on the go. Tapas Tree Grill does offer indoor and outdoor seating as well as carry-out. And the menu is ethnically diverse. The Pork Crepe is a favorite of many. The crepes are sixteen inches across and made in the traditional French

Style. The Thai Noodle Bowl is also very popular. The noodle bowl is made with lemongrass and ginger broth poured over rice noodles and fresh vegetables and mushrooms. Slow roasted pork can be added for an additional charge. Especially popular are the “Burger Chompers,” two beef sliders, with a variety of selections for toppings. The burgers were inspired by a roadside stand along the old, scenic “Alligator Alley” in the Florida Everglades. The Tapas Tree Grill owners moved to Silver City from St. Petersburg, Florida and wanted to share their culinary experience with their new community. In honor of the ethnic heritage of their new home, they serve homemade empanadas in three varieties: pork chorizo with potato, turkey, bacon cheddar cheese and green chile or sweet potato. The empanadas are popular with hikers, who stop by and stock up before going out on the trails in the surrounding area. A customer who was visiting in Silver City for three

days stopped in at the Tapas Tree Grill on the first day of the visit. She liked the empanadas better than anything she had found in Albuquerque so she ordered four dozen to take home. “Word of mouth” has helped to bring in customers. Many of the customers visiting from out of town are in Silver City prior to a camping trip. Outof-town visitors are primarily from Albuquerque, Tucson, El Paso and Las Cruces. Some visitors have come because their friends have told them about Silver City and Tapas Tree Grill and encouraged them to visit. But any day that you stop by, if you are local, you will see your friends and neighbors. The menu as well as the customer mix is very eclectic. The Tapas Tree Grill is located in the courtyard at 601 N. Bullard St. in Silver City. The phone number is 575-5978272 and the website is www. TapasTreeGrill.com. The grill is open from 11a.m. to 3 p.m Saturday through Thursday except for Tuesday when the grill is closed, and open again from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Friday.

David Chapman prepars a crepe in the traditional French Style. (Photo by Lucy Whitmarsh)

Fall Art & Wine Extravaganza

Saturday, October 15th, from 12:00 noon to 5:00pm

Come and enjoy our Internationally Award Winning Wines

Several Very Talented Artists from Mimbres, Gila, Silver City and Deming will participate with items such as: Viking Knit & Chain Maille, Gourd Art, hand crafted jewelry, jewelry made from nature, decorative wine bottles, embroider towels, art and jewelry design, stained glass, botanical art, earrings pendants wire wrapped rings and much more. Asian Food by Esbela Felix will be available for purchase La Esperanza Vineyard and Winery is located off Royal John Mine Road off Hwy 61 in the Mimbres Valley.

One Day Special 20% DISCOUNT for Case of Wine Mix or Match New Mexico Handcrafted Beers will be available for purchase

Our Regular Wine Tastings David & Esperanza Gurule owners/vintners Fridays - Saturdays - Sundays 505 259-9523 • 505 238-6252 Noon to 6pm www.laesperanzavineyardandwinery.com

LIVE MUSIC JULY 2016 • NEVER A COVER! Every Thursday & Saturday Night • 8-11pm OCTOBER 1 DOUBLE CLUTCHERS (ROCKABILLY) Empanadas at Tapas Tree Grill. (Photo by Lucy Whitmarsh)

HEALTHY CHOICES

T

HMS Extends Hours for the Mimbres Valley Clinic

he Hidalgo Medical Center Mimbres Valley Clinic hours have been extended, from two days a week to three days a week, to better serve the healthcare needs of the Mimbres Valley and surrounding communities. The clinic is now open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed between noon

and 1 p.m.) every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. “To make our primary care services more accessible to those HMS serves, and to meet the increased needs of the community, HMS has extended the Mimbres Valley Clinic hours,” HMS Chief Executive Officer Dan Otero said. “Kyle

Rice, CNP, our primary care mid-level provider, and the rest of our team at the Mimbres Valley Clinic are thrilled to offer increased office hours to the community.” Call 575-536-3990 to learn more about the HMS Mimbres Valley Clinic hours or to schedule an appointment.

OCTOBER 6 OCTOBER 8 OCTOBER 13 OCTOBER 15 OCTOBER 20 OCTOBER 22 OCTOBER 27 OCTOBER 29

C.W. AYON (ONE-MAN BLUES BAND) JOE & VICKI PRICE (IOWA ROOTS DUO) POP JAZZ HANA ZARA (INDIE/FOLK FROM VERMONT) TOMAS GORRIO TGTG (ALBUQUERQUE/PERU) ANGWISH (ALTERNATIVE ROCK FROM CHARLOTTE, NC) TIFFANY CHRISTOPHER (ONE-WOMAN BAND) SOULSHINE (ACOUSTIC SOUTHERN ROCK)


42 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

Red or Green? is Desert Exposure’s guide to dining in southwest New Mexico. The listings here—a sampling of our complete and recently completely updated guide online at www.desertexposure. com—include some of our favorites and restaurants we’ve recently reviewed. We emphasize non-national-chain restaurants with sit-down, table service . With each listing, we include a brief categorization of the type of cuisine plus what meals are served: B=Breakfast; L=Lunch; D=Dinner. Unless otherwise noted, restaurants are open seven days a week. Call for exact hours, which change frequently. All phone numbers are area code 575 except as specified. We also note with a star (*) restaurants where you can pick up copies of Desert Exposure.

GRANT COUNTY

Silver City 1ZERO6, 106 N. Texas St., 575313-4418. Pacific Rim, South East Asian, Oaxacan and Italian: Friday to Sunday D, by reservation only. ADOBE SPRINGS CAFÉ, 1617

Red or Green Southwest New Mexico’s best restaurant guide. If we’ve recently reviewed a restaurant, you’ll find a brief capsule of our review and a notation of which issue it originally appeared in. Stories from all back issues of Desert Exposure from January 2005

on are available on our website. Though every effort has been made to make these listings complete and up-to-date, errors and omissions are inevitable and restaurants may make changes

after this issue goes to press. That’s why we urge you to help us make Red or Green? even better. Drop a note to Red or Green? c/o Desert Exposure, 1740-A Calle de Mercado, Las Cruces, NM 88005, or email

editor@desertexposure.com. Remember, these print listings represent only highlights. You can always find the complete, updated Red or Green? guide online at www. desertexposure.com. Bon appétit!

Silver Heights Blvd., 538-3665. Breakfast items, burgers, sandwiches: Sunday B L, all week B L D.* BURGERS & BROWNIES & BEER, OH MY!, 619 N. Bullard St., 575-597-6469. CAFÉ OSO AZUL AT BEAR

MOUNTAIN LODGE, 60 Bear Mountain Ranch Road, 5382538. B L, special D by reservation only.* CHINESE PALACE, 1010 Highway 180E, 538-9300. Chinese: Monday to Friday L D. COURTYARD CAFÉ, Gila Regional Medical Center, 538-4094. American: B L, with special brunch Sundays.* DIANE’S RESTAURANT, 510 N. Bullard St., 538-8722. Fine dining (D), steaks, seafood, pasta, sandwiches (L), salads: Tuesday to Saturday L D, Sunday D only (family-style), weekend brunch. DIANE’S BAKERY & DELI, The Hub, Suite A, Bullard St., 5349229. Artisan breads, pastries, sandwiches, deli: Monday to Saturday B L early D, Sunday L.* DON JUAN’S BURRITOS, 418 Silver Heights Blvd., 538-5440. Mexican: B L. DRIFTER PANCAKE HOUSE, 711 Silver Heights Blvd., 5382916. Breakfast, American: B L, breakfast served throughout. EL GALLO PINTO, 901 N. Hudson St., 597-4559. Mexican: Tuesday, Wednesday and Sunday B L Thursday to Saturday B L D. FORREST’S PIZZA, 601 N. Bullard St. Unit J. 388-1225. Tuesday to Friday L D, Slices only at lunch time. FRY HOUSE, 601 N. Bullard St. Suite C. 388-1964. GIL-A BEANS, 1304 N. Bennett St. Coffeeshop.* GOLDEN STAR, 1602 Silver Heights Blvd., 388-2323. Chinese: L D. GRANDMA’S CAFÉ, 900 Silver Heights Blvd., 388-2627. American, Mexican: B L.* GRINDER MILL, 403 W. College Ave., 538-3366. Mexican: B L D.* HEALTHY EATS, 303 E. 13th St., 534-9404. Sandwiches, burritos, salads, smoothies: L. JALISCO CAFÉ, 100 S. Bullard St., 388-2060. Mexican. Monday to Saturday L D. JAVALINA COFFEE HOUSE, 117 Market St., 388-1350. Coffeehouse.* JUMPING CACTUS, 503 N. Bullard St. Coffeeshop, baked goods, sandwiches, wraps: B L.* KOUNTRY KITCHEN, 1700 Mountain View Road, 388-4512. Mexican: Tuesday to Saturday B L D.* LA COCINA RESTAURANT, 201 W. College Ave., 388-8687. Mexican: L D. LA FAMILIA, 503 N. Hudson St., 388-4600. Mexican: Tuesday to Sunday B L D.* LA MEXICANA, Hwy. 180E and Memory Lane, 534-0142. Mexi-

can and American: B L. LITTLE TOAD CREEK BREWERY & DISTILLERY, 200 N. Bullard St., 956-6144. Burgers, wings, salads, fish, pasta, craft beers and cocktails: Wednesday to Monday L D. * MARKET CAFÉ, 614 Bullard St., 956-6487. Organic and vegetarian deli food. Wednesday to Monday (closed Tuesday) B L. MEXICO VIEJO, Hwy. 90 and Broadway Mexican food stand: Monday to Saturday B L early D. MI CASITA, 2340 Bosworth Dr., 538-5533. New Mexican cuisine: Monday to Thursday L, Friday L D. MILLIE’S BAKE HOUSE, 602 N. Bullard St., 597-2253. Soup, salads, sandwiches, baked goods: Tuesday to Saturday. * NANCY’S SILVER CAFÉ, 514 N. Bullard St., 388-3480. Mexican: Monday to Saturday B L D. THE PARLOR AT DIANE’S, 510 N. Bullard St., 538-8722. Burgers, sandwiches, homemade pizzas, paninis: Tuesday to Sunday L D. PRETTY SWEET EMPORIUM, 312 N. Bullard St., 388-8600. Dessert, ice cream: Monday to Saturday.* Q’S SOUTHERN BISTRO AND BREWERY, 101 E. College Ave., 534-4401. American, steaks, barbecue, brewpub: Monday to Saturday L D. SILVER BOWLING CENTER CAFÉ, 2020 Memory Lane, 538-3612. American, Mexican, hamburgers: L D.* SUNRISE ESPRESSO, 1530 N. Hudson, 388-2027. Coffee shop: Monday to Saturday B L, early D. SUNRISE ESPRESSO, 1212 E. 32nd St., 534-9565. Coffee shop, bakery: Monday to Friday B L, early D, Saturday B L only.* TAPAS TREE, 601 N. Bullard St. in The Hub, Wednesday to Sunday L, Fridays L D. TERRY’S ORIGINAL BARBEQUE, Hwy. 180 and Ranch Club Road. Barbeque to go: L D. TRE ROSAT CAFÉ, 304 N. Bullard St., 654-4919. International eclectic: Monday to Saturday L, D.* VICKI’S EATERY, 315 N. Texas, 388-5430. American: Monday to Friday L, Saturday B L, Sunday B L (to 2 p.m.). * WRANGLER’S BAR & GRILL, 2005 Hwy. 180E, 538-4387. Steak, burgers, appetizers, salads: L D.* YANKIE CREEK COFFEE HOUSE, 112 W. Yankie St. Coffee shop, coffee, home-made pastries and ice cream, fresh fruit smoothies.*

Bayard FIDENCIO’S TACO SHOP, 1108 Tom Foy Blvd. Mexican: B L D. LITTLE NISHA’S, 1101 Tom Foy Blvd., 537-3526. Mexican: Wednesday to Sunday B L D. LOS COMPAS, 1203 Tom Foy Blvd, 654-4109. Sonoran-style Mexican, hot dogs, portas, menudo: L D. M & A BAYARD CAFÉ, 1101 N. Central Ave., 537-2251. Mexican and American: Monday to Friday B L D. SPANISH CAFÉ, 106 Central Ave., 537-2640. Mexican, tamales and menudo (takeout only): B. Sugar Shack, 1102 Tom Foy Blvd., 537-0500. Mexican: Sunday to Friday B L.

Bear Mountain Lodge

It’s time to book your

Holiday Reservations for

The Lodge

Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve & Christmas Day dinners. Remember to reserve your Holiday party dates too! Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner served daily—reservations a must.

60 Bear Mountain Ranch Road

Maira Kalman

575-538-2538 • www.bearmountainlodge.com

You’re invited to a FREE show! Have you ever wondered what to eat to be healthy? -RLQ XV IRU D IUHH VFUHHQLQJ RI D JUHDW QHZ ¿OP WKDW DQVZHUV WKH TXHVWLRQ ZLWK VHYHQ ZRUGV \RX ZLOO QHYHU IRUJHW

Thursday, October 6, 2016 4 pm and 7 pm

Silco Theater, downtown Silver City 311 N. Bullard Street

Donations Appreciated

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Cliff D’S CAFÉ, 8409 Hwy 180. Breakfast dishes, burritos, burgers, weekend smoked meats and ribs: Thursday to Sunday B L. PARKEY’S, 8414 Hwy. 180W, 535-4000. Coffee shop: Monday to Saturday. Lake Roberts SPIRIT CANYON LODGE & CAFÉ, 684 Hwy. 35, 536-9459. German specialties, American lunch and dinner entrées: Saturday D. Mimbres ELK X-ING CAFÉ, (352) 2120448. Home-style meals, sandwiches and desserts: B L. RESTAURANT DEL SOL, 2676 Hwy. 35, San LorenzoBreakfasts, burgers, sandwiches, Mexican: Daily B L early D. Pinos Altos BUCKHORN SALOON AND OPERA HOUSE, Main Street, 538-9911. Steakhouse, pasta, burgers: Monday to Saturday D.

DOÑA ANA COUNTY

Las Cruces & Mesilla ABRAHAM’S BANK TOWER RESTAURANT, 500 S. Main St. 434, 523-5911. American: Monday to Friday B L. A DONG, 504 E. Amador Ave., 527-9248. Vietnamese: L D. ANDELE’S DOG HOUSE, 2184 Avenida de Mesilla, 526-1271. Mexican plus hot dogs, burgers, quesadillas: B L D. ANDELE RESTAURANTE, 1950 Calle del Norte, 526-9631. Mexican: Monday B L, Tuesday to Sunday B L D. ANTONIO’S RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA, 5195 Bataan Memorial West, 373-0222. Pizza, Italian, Mexican: Tuesday to Sunday L D. AQUA REEF, 900-B S. Telshor,


DESERT EXPOSURE 522-7333. Asian, sushi: D. THE BEAN, 2011 Avenida de Mesilla, 523-0560. Coffeehouse. A BITE OF BELGIUM, 741 N. Alameda St., 527-2483. Belgian food: Monday to Friday B L. BOBA CAFÉ, 1900 S. Espina, Ste. 8, 647-5900. Sandwiches, salads, casual fare, espresso: Monday to Saturday L D.* BRAVO’S CAFÉ, 3205 S. Main St., 526-8604. Mexican: Tuesday to Sunday B L. BURGER NOOK, 1204 E. Madrid Ave., 523-9806. Outstanding greenchile cheeseburgers. Tuesday to Saturday L D. BURRITOS VICTORIA, 1295 El Paseo Road, 541-5534. Burritos: B L D. Now serving beer. CAFÉ AGOGO, 1120 Commerce Dr., Suite A, 636-4580. Asian, American, sandwich, salad, rice bowl: Monday to Saturday L D. CARILLO’S CAFÉ, 330 S. Church, 523-9913. Mexican, American: Monday to Saturday L D. CATTLEMAN’S STEAKHOUSE, 2375 Bataan Memorial Hwy., 382-9051. Steakhouse: D. CHA CHI’S RESTAURANT, 2460 S. Locust St.-A, 522-7322. Mexican: B L D. CHILITOS, 2405 S. Valley Dr., 526-4184. Mexican: Monday to Saturday B L D. CHILITOS, 3850 Foothills Rd. Ste. 10, 532-0141. Mexican: B L D. CRAVINGS CAFÉ, 3115 N. Main St., 323-3353. Burgers, sandwiches, wraps, egg dishes, salads: B L. DAY’S HAMBURGERS, WATER & Las Cruces St., 523-8665. Burgers: Monday to Saturday L D. PECAN GRILL & BREWERY, 500 S. Telshor Blvd., 521-1099. Pecan-smoked meats, sandwich-

OCTOBER 2016 • 43 es, steaks, seafood, craft beers: L D. DELICIAS DEL MAR, 1401 El Paseo, 524-2396. Mexican, seafood: B L D. DICK’S CAFÉ, 2305 S. Valley Dr., 524-1360. Mexican, burgers: Sunday B L, Monday to Saturday B L D. DION’S PIZZA, 3950 E. Lohman, 521-3434. Pizza: L D. DOUBLE EAGLE, 2355 Calle De Guadalupe, 523-6700. Southwestern, steaks, seafood: L D, Sun. champagne brunch buffet. DUBLIN STREET PUB, 1745 E. University Ave., 522-0932. Irish, American: L D. EL SOMBRERO PATIO CAFÉ, 363 S. Espina St., 524-9911. Mexican: L D. EMILIA’S, 2290 Calle de Parian, 652-3007. Burgers, Mexican, soup, sandwiches, pastry, juices, smoothies: L D. ENRIQUE’S, 830 W. Picacho, 647-0240. Mexican: B L D. FARLEY’S, 3499 Foothills Rd., 522-0466. Pizza, burgers, American, Mexican: L D. FIDENCIO’S, 800 S. Telshor, 532-5624. Mexican: B L D. FORK IN THE ROAD, 202 N. Motel Blvd., 527-7400. Buffet: B L D 24 hrs. THE GAME BAR & GRILL, 2605 S. Espina, 524-GAME. Sports bar and grill: L D. GARDUÑO’S, 705 S. Telshor (Hotel Encanto), 522-4300. Mexican: B L D. GIROS MEXICAN RESTAURANT, 160 W. Picacho Ave., 541-0341. Mexican: B L D. GO BURGER DRIVE-IN, 1008 E. Lohman, 524-9251. Burgers, Mexican: Monday to Friday B L. GOLDEN STAR CHINESE FAST FOOD, 1420 El Paseo, 523-2828. Chinese: L D.

GRANDY’S COUNTRY COOKING, 1345 El Paseo Rd., 5264803. American: B L D. HABANERO’S 600 E. Amador Ave., 524-1829. Fresh Mexican,: B L D. HIGH DESERT BREWING COMPANY, 1201 W. Hadley Ave., 525-6752. Brew pub: L D.* INTERNATIONAL DELIGHTS, 1245 El Paseo Rd., 647-5956. Greek and International: B L D. J.C. TORTAS, 1196 W. Picacho Ave., 647-1408. Mexican: L D. JOSE MURPHY’S, 1201 E. Amador (inside Ten Pin Alley), 5414064. Mexican, American: L D. JOSEFINA’S OLD GATE CAFÉ, 2261 Calle de Guadalupe, 5252620. Pastries, soups, salads, sandwiches: Monday to Thursday L, Friday to Sunday B L. KATANA TEPPANYAKI GRILL, 1001 E. University Ave., 5220526. Meals created before your very eyes. Japanese: Monday to Friday L D, Saturday D. KEVA JUICE, 1001 E. University, 522-4133. Smoothies, frozen yogurt: B L D. LA GUADALUPANA, 930 El Paseo Road. 523-5954. Mexican: Tuesday to Saturday B L D. Sunday B L. LA MEXICANA TORTILLERIA, 1300 N. Solano Dr, 541-9617. Mexican: L D. LA NUEVA CASITA CAFÉ, 195 N. Mesquite, 523-5434. Mexican and American: B L. LA POSTA RESTAURANT DE MESILLA, 2410 Calle De San Albino, 524-3524Mexican, steakhouse: L D, Saturday, Sunday and holidays also B. LAS TRANCAS, 1008 S. Solano Dr., 524-1430. Mexican, steaks, burgers, fried chicken: L D, Saturday and Sunday also B. LE RENDEZ-VOUS CAFÉ, 2701

W. Picacho Ave. #1, 527-0098. French pastry, deli, sandwiches: Monday to Saturday B L. LET THEM EAT CAKE, 141 N. Roadrunner Parkway, 649-8965. Cupcakes: Tuesday to Saturday LORENZO’S PAN AM, 1753 E. University Ave., 521-3505. Italian, pizza: L D. LOS COMPAS CAFÉ, 6335 Bataan Memorial W., 382-2025. Mexican: B L D. LOS COMPAS CAFÉ, 603 S. Nevarez St., 523-1778. Mexican: B L D. LOS COMPAS, 1120 Commerce Dr., 521-6228. Mexican: B L D.* LOS MARIACHIS, 754 N. Motel Blvd., 523-7058. Mexican: B L D. MESILLA VALLEY KITCHEN, 2001 E. Lohman Ave. #103, 5239311. American, Mexican: B L.* N.M. BAR & GRILLE, 1803 Avenida de Mesilla, 652-4953. Steaks, barbecue, seafood, sandwiches, salads, pasta: L D. METROPOLITAN DELI, 1001 University Ave., 522-3354. Sandwiches: L D. MIGUEL’S, 1140 E. Amador Ave., 647-4262. Mexican: B L D. MI PUEBLITO, 1355 E. Idaho Ave., 524-3009. Mexican: Monday to Friday B L D, Saturday and Sunday B L. MILAGRO COFFEE Y ESPRESSO, 1733 E. University Ave., 5321042. Coffeehouse: B L D.* MIX PACIFIC RIM CUISINE AND MIX EXPRESS, 1001 E. University Ave. #D4, 532-2042. Asian, Pacific: Monday to Saturday L D. MOONGATE CAFÉ, 9395 Bataan Memorial, 382-5744. Coffee shop, Mexican, American: B L. MOUNTAIN VIEW MARKET KITCHEN, 1300 El Paseo Road, 523-0436. Sandwiches, bagels, wraps, salads and other healthy

OKTOADERFEST Street Party Saturday October 15th

Keg Toss - Stein Race Human Fooseball Oktoberfest Dancing Girls German Food & Beer Specials

ALL DAY FREE CONCERT 2pm to midnight

Kick-off party Friday October 14 Hossenfeffer Feast RHYTHM MYSTIC live at 8pm

fare: Monday to Saturday: B L early D. * NELLIE’S CAFÉ, 1226 W. Hadley Ave., 524-9982. Mexican: Tuesday to Saturday B L. NOPALITO RESTAURANT, 2605 Missouri Ave., 522-0440. Mexican: L D. NOPALITO RESTAURANT, 310 S. Mesquite St., 524-0003. Mexican: Sunday to Tuesday, Thursday to Saturday. L D.* OLD TOWN RESTAURANT, 1155 S. Valley Dr., 523-4586. Mexican, American: B L.* ORIENTAL PALACE, 225 E. Idaho, 526-4864. Chinese: L D. PAISANO CAFÉ, 1740 Calle de Mercado, 524-0211. Mexican: B L D.* PEPE’S, 1405 W. Picacho, 5410277. Mexican: B L D. PHO SAIGON, 1160 El Paseo Road, 652-4326. Vietnamese: L D. PICACHO PEAK BREWING CO., 3900 W. Picacho, 575-6806394. PLAYER’S GRILL, 3000 Champions Dr. (NMSU golf course clubhouse), 646-2457. American: B L D. RANCHWAY BARBECUE, 604 N. Valley Dr., 523-7361. Barbecue, Mexican: Monday to Friday B L D, Saturday D. RASCO’S BBQ, 125 S. Campo St., 526-7926. Barbecued brisket, pulled pork, smoked sausage, ribs. RED BRICK PIZZA, 2808 N. Telshor Blvd., 521-7300. Pizzas, sandwiches, salads: L D. RENOO’S THAI RESTAURANT, 1445 W. Picacho Ave., 373-3000. Thai: Monday to Friday L D, Saturday D. ROBERTO’S MEXICAN FOOD, 908 E. Amador Ave., 523-1851. Mexican: B L D.*

Home-brewing equipment & supplies for beer, wine, & cider

New Mexico Made Beer, Wine & Spirits Food & Gifts Next Door to Our Tasting Room

Little Toad Creek Brewery & Distillery Downtown Silver City


44 • OCTOBER 2016 ROSIE’S CAFÉ DE MESILLA, 300 N. Main St., 526-1256. Breakfast, Mexican, burgers: Saturday to Thursday B L, Friday B L D. SAENZ GORDITAS, 1700 N. Solano Dr., 527-4212. Excellent, gorditas, of course, but also amazing chicken tacos. Mexican: Monday to Saturday L D. SANTORINI’S, 1001 E. University Ave., 521-9270. Greek, Mediterranean: Monday to Saturday L D. SALUD DE MESILLA, 1800-B Avenida de Mesilla, 527-2869. American, Continental: B L D. THE SHED, 810 S. Valley Dr., 525-2636. American, pizza, Mexican, desserts: Wednesday to Sunday B L.* SI ITALIAN BISTRO, 523 E. Idaho, 523-1572. Italian: Monday L, Tuesday to Saturday L D. SI SEÑOR, 1551 E. Amador Ave., 527-0817. Mexican: L D. SPANISH KITCHEN, 2960 N. Main St., 526-4275. Mexican: Monday to Saturday B L D. SPIRIT WINDS COFFEE BAR, 2260 S. Locust St., 521-1222. Sandwiches, coffee, bakery: B L D.* ST. CLAIR WINERY & BISTRO, 1720 Avenida de Mesilla, 5240390. Wine tasting, bistro: L D. SUNSET GRILL, 1274 Golf Club Road (Sonoma Ranch Golf Course clubhouse), 521-1826. American, Southwest, steak, burgers, seafood, pasta: B L D. TERIYAKI CHICKEN HOUSE, 805 El Paseo Rd., 541-1696. Japanese: Monday to Friday L D. THAI DELIGHT DE MESILLA, 2184 Avenida de Mesilla, 5251900. Thai, salads, sandwiches, seafood, steaks, German: L D.* TIFFANY’S PIZZA & GREEK AMERICAN CUISINE, 755 S. Telshor Blvd No. G1, 532-5002. Pizza, Greek, deli: Tuesday to Saturday B L D.* VINTAGE WINES, 2461 Calle de Principal, 523-WINE. Wine and cigar bar, tapas: L D. WOK-N-WORLD, 5192 E. Boutz, 526-0010. Chinese: Monday to Saturday L D. ZEFFIRO PIZZERIA NAPOLETANA, 136 N. Water St., 525-6757. Pizza, pasta, also sandwiches at adjoining Popular Artisan Bakery: Monday to Saturday L D. ZEFFIRO NEW YORK PIZZERIA, 101 E. University Ave., 5256770. Pizza: L D.

www.desertexposure.com Anthony ERNESTO’S MEXICAN FOOD, 200 Anthony Dr., 882-3641. Mexican: B L. LA COCINITA, 908 W. Main Dr., 589-1468. Mexican: L. Chapparal EL BAYO STEAK HOUSE, 417 Chaparral Dr., 824-4749. Steakhouse: Tuesday to Sunday B L D. TORTILLERIA SUSY, 661 Paloma Blanca Dr., 824-9377. Mexican: Monday to Saturday B L D, Sunday B L. Doña Ana BIG MIKE’S CAFÉ, Thorpe Road. Mexican, breakfasts, burgers: B L D. Santa Teresa BILLY CREWS, 1200 Country Club Road, 589-2071. Steak, seafood: L D.

LUNA COUNTY

Deming ADOBE DELI, 3970 Lewis Flats Road SE, 546-0361. Bar, deli, steaks: L D.* BALBOA MOTEL & RESTAURANT, 708 W. Pine St., 5466473. Mexican, American: Sunday to Friday L D. BELSHORE RESTAURANT, 1030 E. Pine St., 546-6289. Mexican, American: Tuesday to Sunday B L. CAMPOS RESTAURANT, 105 S. Silver, 546-0095. Mexican, American, Southwestern: L D.* CHINA RESTAURANT, 110 E. Pine St., 546-4146. Chinese: Tuesday to Sunday L D. EL CAMINO REAL, 900 W. Pine St., 546-7421. Mexican, American: B L D. ELISA’S HOUSE OF PIES AND RESTAURANT, 208 1/2 S. Silver Alley, 494-4639. American, barbecue, sandwiches, pies: Monday to Saturday L D. * EL MIRADOR, 510 E. Pine St., 544-7340. Mexican: Monday to Saturday B L D. “FORGHEDABOUDIT” pizza & wings, 115 N. Silver Ave., 2753881. Italian, pizza, wings: Monday to Saturday L D, Sunday D. GRAND MOTOR INN & LOUNGE, 1721 E. Pine, 5462632. Mexican, steak, seafood: B L D.

IRMA’S, 123 S. Silver Ave., 544-4580. Mexican, American, seafood: B L D. LA FONDA, 601 E. Pine St., 5460465. Mexican: B L D.* LAS CAZUELAS, 108 N. Platinum Ave. (inside El Rey meat market), 544-8432. Steaks, seafood, Mexican: Tuesday to Saturday L D.* MANGO MADDIE’S, 722 E. Florida St., 546-3345. Salads, sandwiches, juice bar, coffee drinks. MANOLO’S CAFÉ, 120 N. Granite St., 546-0405. Mexican, American: Monday to Saturday B L D, Sunday B L. PATIO CAFÉ, 1521 Columbus Road, 546-5990. Burgers, American: Monday to Saturday L D.* PRIME RIB GRILL (inside Holiday Inn), I-10 exit 85, 546-2661. Steak, seafood, Mexican: B D. RANCHER’S GRILL, 316 E. Cedar St., 546-8883. Steakhouse, burgers: L D.* SI SEÑOR, 200 E. Pine St., 546-3938. Mexican: Monday to Saturday B L D, Sunday B L. SUNRISE KITCHEN, 1409 S. Columbus Road, 544-7795American, Mexican, breakfasts: Monday to Thursday B L, Friday B L D. TACOS MIRASOL, 323 E. Pine St., 544-0646. Mexican: Monday, Wednesday, Saturday B L D, Tuesday B L. TOCAYO’S MEXICAN RESTAURANT, 1601 E. Pine St., 5671963. Mexican, dine in or take out: Monday to Saturday B L D, Sunday B L. Akela APACHE HOMELANDS RESTAURANT, I-10. Burgers, ribs, etc.: B L D.* Columbus IRMA’S KITCHEN, B L D, Highway 11, 575-694-4026, Mexican food. LA CASITA, 309 Taft, 575-5312371. B L D, Mexican food. PATIO CAFÉ, 23 Broadway, 5312495. Burgers, American: B L.*

HIDALGO COUNTY

Lordsburg EL CHARRO RESTAURANT, 209 S. P Blvd., 542-3400. Mexican: B L D. FIDENCIO’S, 604 E. Motel Dr., 542-8989. Mexican: B L early D. KRANBERRY’S FAMILY RESTAURANT, 1405 Main St., 542-9400. Mexican, American: B L D. MAMA ROSA’S PIZZA, 1312 Main St., 542-8400. Pizza, subs, calzones, salads, chicken wings, cheeseburgers, shrimp baskets: L D. RAMONA’S CAFÉ, 904 E. Motel Dr., 542-3030. Mexican, American: Tuesday to Friday B L D, Sunday B mid-day D. Animas PANTHER TRACKS CAFÉ, Hwy. 338, 548-2444. Burgers, Mexican, American: Monday to Friday BLD Rodeo RODEO STORE AND CAFÉ. 195 Hwy. 80, 557-2295. Coffee shop food: Monday to Saturday B L. RODEO TAVERN, 557-2229. Shrimp, fried chicken, steaks, burgers, seafood: Wednesday to Saturday D.

CATRON COUNTY

Reserve ADOBE CAFÉ, Hwy. 12 & Hwy. 180, 533-6146. Deli, American, Mon. pizza, Sunday BBQ ribs:

Sun.-Mon. B L D, Wed.-Fri. B L. BLACK GOLD, 98 Main St., 5336538. Coffeehouse, pastries. CARMEN’S, 101 Main St., 5336990. Mexican, American: B L D. ELLA’S CAFÉ, 533-6111. American: B L D. UNCLE BILL’S BAR, 230 N. Main St., 533-6369. Pizza: Monday to Saturday L D. Glenwood ALMA GRILL, Hwy. 180, 5392233. Breakfast, sandwiches, burgers, Mexican: Sunday to Wednesday, Friday to Saturday B L. GOLDEN GIRLS CAFÉ, Hwy. 180, 539-2457. Breakfast: B. MARIO’S PIZZA, Hwy. 180, 5392316. Italian: Monday to Saturday D. Other Catron County PIE TOWN CAFÉ, Pie Town, NM, 575-772-2700

SIERRA COUNTY

Arrey ARREY CAFÉ, Hwy 187 Arrey, 575-267-4436, Mexican, American, Vegetarian, B L D. Chloride CHLORIDE BANK CAFÉ, 300, Wall Street, 575-743-0414, American, Thursday-Saturday L D, Sunday L. Elephant Butte BIG FOOD EXPRESS, 212 Warm Springs Blvd., 575-744-4896, American, Asian, Seafood, B L. CASA TACO, 704, Hwy 195, 575744-4859, American, Mexican, Vegetarian, L D. HODGES CORNER, 915 NM 195, American, Mexican, B L. IVORY TUSK TAVERN & RESTAURANT, 401 Hwy 195, 575-744-5431, American, Mexican, Vegetarian, Seafood, Daily L D, Sunday Buffet. THE CLUB RESTAURANT, 101 Club House Drive, 575-744-7100, American, Seafood, L D. Hatch B & E BURRITOS, 303 Franklin, 575-267-5191, Mexican, B L. PEPPER POT, 207 W Hall, 575267-3822, Mexican, B L. SPARKY’S, 115 Franklin, 575267-4222, American, Mexican, Thursday-Sunday L D. VALLEY CAFÉ, 335 W. Hall St. 575-267-4798, Mexican, American, B L. Hillsboro HILLSBORO GENERAL STORE, 10697 Hwy 152, American, Southwestern, Vegetarian, Friday-Wednesday B L. BARBER SHOP CAFÉ, Main Street, 575-895-5283, American, Mediterranean, sandwiches, Monday-Saturday L. Truth or Consequences A & B DRIVE-IN, 211 Broadway, 575-894-9294, Mexican, American, Vegetarian, B L D. BAR-B-QUE ON BROADWAY, 308 Broadway, 575-894-7047, American, Mexican, B L. BRAZEN FOX, 313 North Broadway, 575-297-0070, Mexican, Vegetarian, Wednesday-Sunday, L D. CAFÉ BELLA LUCA, 301 S. Jones, 575-894-9866, Italian, American, Vegetarian, Seafood, D. CARMEN’S KITCHEN, 1806 S. Broadway, 575-894-0006, American, Mexican, Vegetarian, Monday-Friday B L D, Saturday, B L. EL FARO, 315 N. Broadway, 575-

894-2886, American, Mexican, Vegetarian, Monday-Friday B L D, Saturday, B L. GRAPEVINE BISTRO, 413 Broadway, 575-894-0404, American, Vegetarian, B L. JOHNNY B’S, 2260 N. Date Street, (575-894-0147, American, Mexican, B L D. LA COCINA/HOT STUFF, 1 Lakeway Drive, 575-894-6499, American, Mexican, Vegetarian, L D. LATITUDE 33, 304 S. Pershing, 575-740-7804, American, Vegetarian, Asian, L D. LOS ARCOS STEAK & LOBSTER, 1400 N. Date Street, 575894-6200, American, Seafood, D. LOS FIDENCIOS, 1615 S. Broadway, 575-894-3737, Mexican, Monday-Saturday B L D, Sunday, B L. MARIAS, 1990 S. Broadway, 575-894-9047, American, Mexican, Vegetarian, Monday-Saturday B L D. PACIFIC GRILL, 800 N. Date St., 575-894-7687, Italian, American, Vegetarian, Asian, Seafood, Tuesday-Thursday-Friday L D, Saturday D, Sunday L. PASSION PIE CAFÉ, 406 Main, 575-894-0008, American, Vegetarian, B L. R & C SUMTHINS, 902 Date St. 575-894-1040, American, Tuesday-Sunday L . STONE AGE CAFÉ & POINT BLANC WINERY, 165 E. Ninth St., (575)894-2582, American, L D. SUNSET GRILL, 1301 N. Date, 575-894-8904, American, Mexican, Thursday-Monday B L D. THE RESTAURANT AT SIERRA GRANDE LODGE, 501 McAdoo, 575-894-6976, American, Seafood, B L D. TURTLEBACK OASIS MARKETPLACE, 520 Broadway, 575894-0179, American, Vegetarian, Monday-Saturday B L. YOUR PLACE, 400 Date St., 575-740-1544, American, Monday-Saturday L D, Sunday L. Williamsburg MEXICAN GRILL, Shell Gas Station 719 S. Broadway, 575-8940713, Mexican, Monday-Saturday B L.

LINCOLN COUNTY

Ruidoso CAN’T STOP SMOKIN’ BBQ, 418 Mechem Dr., 575-630-0000: Monday-Sunday L, D CASA BLANCA, 501 Mechem Dr., 575-257-2495: Mexican, Monday-Sunday L, D CATTLE BARON STEAK & SEAFOOD, 657 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-9355: L, D CHEF LUPE’S FAMILY RESTAURANT, 1101 Sudderth Dr., 575257-4687: Mexican, Monday-Sunday B, L, D CIRCLE J BBQ, 1825 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-4105: Monday-Sunday L, D COMAL MEXICAN RESTAURANT, 2117 Sudderth Dr., 575258-1397: Monday-Sunday L, D EL PARAISO, 721 Mechem Dr., 575-257-0279: Mexican, Monday-Saturday, B, L, D GRACE O’MALLEY’S IRISH PUB, 2331 Sudderth Dr., 575630-0219: D THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA RESTAURANT, 2913 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-2522: Monday-Sunday L, D GRILL CALIENTE, 2800 Sudderth Dr., 575-630-0224: Mexican, burgers, Tuesday-Sunday L, D HALL OF FLAME BURGERS, 2500 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-9987:


DESERT EXPOSURE Monday-Saturday L, D LINCOLN COUNTY GRILL, 2717 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-7669: American, Monday-Sunday B, L, D LUCY’S MEXICALI RESTAURANT, 2408 Sudderth Dr., 575257-8754: Mexican, Monday-Saturday L, D LOG CABIN RESTAURANT, 1074 Mechem Dr., 575-258-5029: Breakfast, Wednesday-Saturday B, L MICHELENA’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT, 2703 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-5753: Wednesday-Sunday L, D NEW CALI CAFÉ, 201 Eagle Dr., 575-257-8652: Comfort food, Monday-Saturday B, L OUR DAILY BREAD CAFÉ, 113 Rio St., 575-257-1778: American, Monday-Sunday B, L PENA’S PLACE, 2963 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-4135: Breakfast, Mexican, B, L PORKY’S, 2306 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-0544: Mexican, Monday-Sunday B, L, D THE RANCHERS STEAK AND SEAFOOD, 2823 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-7540: Monday-Sunday L, D SACRED GROUNDS COFFEE & TEA HOUSE, 2704 Sudderth Dr.,

OCTOBER 2016 • 45 575-257-2273: Coffee, pastries, B, L, D TEXAS CLUB, 212 Metz Dr., 575258-3325: Steak and seafood, Tuesday-Sunday D TINA’S CAFÉ, 522 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-8930: Comfort food, Tuesday-Sunday B, L THE VILLAGE BUTTERY, 2107 Sudderth Dr., 575-257-9251: American, Monday-Saturday B, L YEE’S EXPRESS, 633 Sudderth Dr., 575-630-1120: Chinese, Monday-Saturday, L, D

OTERO COUNTY

Alamogordo ALAMO GRILL, 2913 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-434-5982: Burgers, breakfast food, Monday-Sunday B, L, D BROWN BAG DELI, 900 Washington Ave., 575-437-9751: Monday-Sunday B, L, D CAN’T STOP SMOKING BBQ, 900 E. 10th St., 575-437-4227: Monday-Sunday L, D COWBOYS STEAKHOUSE, 606 Hwy. 70 W., 575-446-6300: Monday-Sunday B, L, D EDDIE’S BURRITOS, 700 E. 1st St., 575-437-0266: Monday-Saturday B, L EL CAMINO, 1022 N. White

Sands Blvd., 575-437-8809: Mexican, Monday-Sunday L, D HI-D-HO DRIVE IN, 414 S. White Sands Blvd., 575-437-6400: Monday-Sunday B, L, D LA HACIENDA, 804 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-443-1860: Monday-Sunday B, L, D MARGO’S MEXICAN FOOD, 504 E. 1st St., 575-434-0689: Monday-Sunday B, L, D MEMORIES RESTAURANT, 1223 N. New York Ave., 575-437-0077: American, Tuesday-Saturday L, D MIZU SUSHI ASIAN CUISINE, 1115 S. White Sands Blvd., 575434-2348: Monday-Sunday L, D NUCKLEWEED PLACE, 526 Laborcita Canyon Rd., La Luz, NM, 575-434-0000: Comfort food, Thursday-Friday D, Saturday-Sunday B, L, D OUR COUNTRY KITCHEN, 1201 N. New York Ave., 575-434-3431: Breakfast, Monday-Saturday B, L PEPPER’S GRILL, 3200 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-437-9717: American Monday-Saturday L, D, Sunday L PIZZA MILL & SUB FACTORY, 1315 10th St., 575-434-1313: Monday-Sunday L, D PIZZA PATIO, 2203 E. 1st St., 575-434-9633: Monday-Saturday

L, D RIZO’S RESTAURANT, 1480 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-4342607: Mexican, Tuesday-Sunday L, D ROCKET NATIONAL BUFFET, 607 S. White Sands Blvd, 575437-5905: Chinese, Monday-Sunday L, D ROCKIN’ BZ BURGERS, 3005 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-4342375: Tuesday-Sunday L, D SI SEÑOR, 2300 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-437-7879: Monday-Saturday L, D STELLA VITA, 902 N. New York Ave.: Steaks, Monday-Wednesday, L, Thursday-Friday L, D, Saturday D WAFFLE & PANCAKE SHOPPE, 905 S. White Sands Blvd., 575437-0433: Monday-Sunday B, L TAIWAN KITCHEN, 110 N. White Sands Blvd., 575-434-4337: Monday-Friday L, D Tularosa GRILL 49 STEAKS AND TAP HOUSE, 313 Granado Street, 585-4949. Wood grilled meats, craft beer, artisan breads, roasted chicken: Monday through Sunday, including full brunch on Sunday. Closed between 3 and 5.

LOREDO’S RESTAURANT AND BAKERY, 603 St. Francis Drive, 585-3300. Mexican menu and traditional Mexican pastries, Tuesday through Sunday, B L. CASA DE SUENOS, 35 St. Thomas Drive, 585-3494. Open daily, L D. YUM-YUM’S, 460 Central Ave., 585-2529. AL-O-MAR RESTAURANT, 205 Central Ave. 585-2129. Classic drive-in, carside service or dine in, B L D. LA ROSA STEAKHOUSE, 21 St. Francis Drive, 585-3339. Open daily, B L D. JAY’S PIZZA & WINGS, 1108 St. Francis Drive, 585-3111. Dine in or deliver. Open daily, L D. TULIE FREEZE, 419 St. Francis Drive, 585-2525. Open daily except Tuesdays, L D. Note—Restaurant hours and meals served vary by day of the week and change frequently; call ahead to make sure. Key to abbreviations: B=Breakfast; L=Lunch; D=Dinner.*=Find copies of Desert Exposure here. Send updates, additions and corrections to: editor@desertexposure.com.

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46 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

FOOTBALL FOLLIES • SUSIE OUDERKIRK

A Little Pain Can’t Hurt You Editor’s note: Desert Exposure writer Susie Ouderkirk recently got the opportunity to do something she’s longed for all her life: play football. She made the Las Cruces Coyotes full-contact women’s football team. This is the continuing story of her journey into the sport.

I

’d survived the try outs and the first practice with what I thought was a reasonable amount of pain. After a four-day rest, my sore right quadriceps muscle had gone from shouting to whispering. But I knew it was vulnerable, and that I could hurt it again just doing the basic warmups required. I had two choices: stand on the sidelines and take in as much as I could visually, or get back into the fray and hope for the best. I’d take it play by play. At the beginning of practice, the coaches explained to us that this early in the season no player was already pegged into a certain position. Everyone would get to try all the positions, and the coaches would watch and evaluate and make decisions down the road. They said we might be moved around a lot. The Sugar N Spice League, which is the parent organization of the Las Cruces Coyotes, not only uses a smaller ball and a smaller field, the teams play eight on eight, not 11 on 11 like most football. So only 16 players would start each game: eight on offense, eight on defense, coach Avalos explained. What was this weird feeling creeping up from my gut to my chest? Was I feeling competitive? Already? I found myself surveying my teammates and weighing myself against the other 24 women, counting out how many were obviously better suited to play this game than I was. Was I at least in the top 16? Alas, I knew I wasn’t. As the realization sunk like a rock in my gut, I started to plot. Should I bake cookies for the coaches? Should I start to compliment their rugged good looks? Should I cry and play the delicate flower? Should I mope and hope? I know what my first and most influential coach, my dad Carl Eichstaedt, would say. He’d say, “Be a good teammate. Catch the ball. Every time. Do your job. Every time. Work harder. Get there early. Stay late.” But who was I kidding? Just making the team was an accomplishment; actually getting to play in a real Sugar N Spice game against other real Sugar N Spice women was a luxury I might not be able to afford. No matter how many times my head told me I was just as fast, just as strong, just as athletic and just as capable as the others, my body had the last word. And ultimately, coach had to do what was best for the team. My right quad muscle was still painful, and I was still working at about half speed for the running drills. I focused on the correct positions with my back and shoulders and arms and hands, since I couldn’t be explosive when running. I was determined to be a good team member, do what I could with the pain, and carry on. But during the sprint warm ups, my left quad clenched up into the same biting rictus as the ailing right, and picking up either knee higher than about five inches created a ripping, slicing pain with every step. It was painful enough that I stopped thinking about how to handle the situation; rational thought and problem solving fly out the window when pain walks in the door. I told coach the pain was worse and now doubled. He told me to step aside and call it a night; rest and ice would be on my agenda for several days. I was relived to stand still and not provoke the pain, but I was disappointed to be unable to finish the drills. Coach Tony said I should give the muscles a full week with no stress and no stretching, and come back slowly. I stayed through the end of practice, limped sadly back to my car and drove tentatively to my house. For the first time in my life, I was craving a shot of hard liquor. My husband, Mike, poured me a little glass of bourbon, stuck some ice cubes in it and dropped three ibuprofen into my hand. Purely medicinal. As I iced my thighs and sipped my whiskey, I realized that I still loved being a Coyote. Maybe now more than before. On the dusty edges of my brain, I considered what would happen if my quads never recovered. If they never got back to the strength they were 15 years ago. If every running step was going to be painful from now on, and the disability would make me too slow to be a productive member of the Coyotes. If no matter how much I wanted it, I just couldn’t do it. That’s what the whiskey was for.

Foolish Pleasure The Las Cruces Coyotes’ first official practice was June 28 on the Oñate High School football field. In addition to Head

Susie Ouderkirk in action, practicing at home. (Courtesy Photos)

Coach Billy Avalos were three men who yelled a lot. These were assistant coaches Jamar, Tony and Jacob. They split us into five groups and herded us to different areas of the field. My group started with sprints between markers: running, tapping the ground, running back, tapping again, back to the marker, turning right and sprinting back. With no cleats on my tennies, I slipped like Bambi on the frozen pond. Coach didn’t reach down to help me up, supportive smile on his face. Instead he barked: “Get up! Keep going!” I began to understand this was not an introduction to “football-lite.” This was real football, and my old body was in the process of a colossal attitude adjustment. But I pushed through. Damn the sore muscles, full speed ahead. Nest was a tackling station, overseen by Coach Jacob, who, despite his thick beard, looked too young to buy beer. But his presence, carriage and expertise belied his appearance. He introduced several thick, plastic pillows, called bags, about the size of couch cushions. On the ground in front of each bag, we practiced proper defensive form: chests up and shoulders back like intense soldiers, shoulder blades flat, hands out. We lunged forward, thrusting our hips, and attacked the bags, landing on our chests with a satisfying “thwack.” Coach Jacob advised, tweaked our form and complimented our aggression. I gave it my all, smacking that bag like a woman scorned. At the next station, Coach Jamar gave us our position names (“nose,” “right tackle,” “left tackle”) and we practiced pushing each other backwards. You can’t take a hold of your sparring partner’s shirt (that’s “holding”). It’s more about what you do with your torso and legs. Next, Coach Tony had us sprinting through an obstacle course, weaving around bags, high stepping, reversing, shuffling sideways. It felt like a modern dance lesson, except faster. The practice was coming to an end, and Coach Jamar called us together for a recap and, I assumed, congratulations. Instead of a verbal pat on the back, he shouted, “Five lines. Now. Hustle.” If you’ve never been yelled at by a coach, it’s unforgettable. The vocal power and authoritative, salty language, registers in your solar plexus like a shock wave. In five lines we started our sprints. That’s when things got painful. Just off the line I felt a jabbing pain in the muscle on the top of my right thigh. It slowed me down. My body was saying, “What you’re doing now is mean. You will slow down. You will stop running.” Because there were 24 other women doing the same thing, (feeling the same pain?), I kept running. Only slower. Every time I brought my leg forward, that thin, fiery strip of pain on my quadriceps muscle clenched its teeth inside my leg. Next sprint, same thing. I was no longer having fun. Being the daughter of a coach, my gut told me to “suck it up” and finish the drill. However, my brain reminded me about “good pain” and “bad pain,” and I took a moment to evaluate which one I had. It was definitely “bad pain.” For the first time during my football journey, reality reminded me I am a woman with a husband, a daughter, four horses, four dogs and a cat name Bentley who all needed me. I have a job that requires I drive and walk around talking to people, taking pictures. I have to go grocery shopping, do laundry, make meals. Can I afford to injure myself? Was I being foolish and selfish? Mercifully, practice ended. Do I say something about the pain in my leg, or is that whining? What would Walter Payton, do? What would my dad do? But it didn’t happen to Walter Payton or my dad. It happened to me, and common sense told me to say something. I was sure coach would know exactly what to do. So I pulled him aside, showed him what hurt and told him it was “bad pain.” How he responded would be a learning experience for me on many levels. If he brushed it off and told me to toughen up, I knew my body was just too old for football, which was feeling more and more like a foolish pleasure. But Coach Avila listened. He asked a couple of questions and said, “Rest it. It’s early in the season and I’ll need you healthy down the road.” Even though my leg hurt (“bad pain”) his words were the sweetest I’d heard all day. He needed me. Foolish or not, I was still on the team. Readers replied with a lot of positive notes to Susie’s previous installment of Football Follies in the September issue. These kind messages encouraged her in her journey into the sport, please keep up the bolstering support if you are enjoying the adventure alongside her by email at editor@desertexposure.com.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 47

40 DAYS & 40 NIGHTS

What’s Going On in October SATURDAY, OCT. 1

Silver City/Grant County Artisan Market — 9 a.m.-2 p.m. at 614 N. Bullard St. Info. 575-3882343. Mimbres Valley Harvest and Health Fair — 9 a.m.-4 p.m. in San Lorenzo. Event includes wellness screenings, pie cooking contest, tours, live music and much more. The Big Ditch Crickets play from 3:30 to 4:30. Info: Grace Williams. Fort Bayard Walking Tour — 9:15 a.m.-noon, Fort Bayard is located two miles north of U.S. Highway 180 at Santa Clara. Info: 575-956-3294. Diabetic Foods tour of the Silver City Food Coop — 11 a.m.. at the Silver City Food Coop, 614 N. Bullard St. Bret Samquist is the presenter. Info: 575-388-2343. Sean Ashby at the Little Toad Creek Brewery & Distillery — 8 p.m. at 200 N. Bullard St. Solo guitarist/singer/songwriter. Info: 575956-6144. Deming/Luna County Stars-N-Parks at Rockhound State Park — 8-9:30 p.m. at Rockhound State Park. John Gilkison presents Mars and Saturn in the southwest, and the Summer Milky Way Galaxy. Info: 575-635-0982. Alamogordo/Tularosa/ Otero County Trinity Breakfast — 6:30-8 a.m. at the Tularosa High School parking lot. The Alamogordo Breakfast Lions Club will be selling breakfast items for hungry Trinity Site visitors who are meeting to caravan out to the site. Trinity Site Tour — 7 a.m.-2 p.m. meeting at the Tularosa High School Athletics Field Parking Lot, 1305 8th Street, in Tularosa to caravan to the site of the first atomic bomb blast. Drivers must be lined up at 7:30 a.m., caravan leaves at 8 a.m. Info: 575-437-6120. Las Cruces/Mesilla Medicinal Flora of Dripping Springs walk — 7:30 a.m. at Dripping Springs with the Southwest Environmental Center. Register to join the Back by Noon series walk. Info: 575-522-5552. Storytellers of Las Cruces — 10:30 a.m. at both COAS Bookstore locations in Las Cruces. Children who attend receive a $2 book coupon. The Servant of Two Masters — starts at 2 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. at the New Mexico State University Center for the Arts. A French comedy written in 1746 and translated to English, the play is based on a style of

theatre called “Commedia dell’arte.� Info: 575-646-1420. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 7 a.m.-3 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630. Rod Run and Car Show — 8 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Ruidoso Downs Racetrack and Casino. Info: 915-5980621. Arts and Crafts Fair — 9 a.m.-5p.m. at the Boys and Girls Club of Sierra Blanca, 134 Reese Drive in Ruidoso. Info: 575-808-8338. Parade — 10-11 a.m. through Midtown Ruidoso. Info: 575-257-7395. New Mexico State Open Chili Cook-Off and Chile Society Pod Chili Cook-Off — tasting starts at noon at the Ruidoso Downs Racetrack and Casino. Info: 575-3906184. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Farmers Market — 8:30-11:30 a.m. at Ralph Edwards Park in Truth of Consequences. Info: 575-894-9375. Old Time Fiddlers Saturday Night Dance — 7-9 p.m. at 710 Elm Street in Truth or Consequences. Info 575744-9137. Socorro/Socorro County Oktoberfest — 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at the Hammel Museum, 500 6th St. in Socorro. Food, drinks, vendors and tour the old brewery. Info: www. socorronm.org.

SUNDAY, OCT. 2

Silver City/Grant County Erika May — 1-3 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House, 112 West Yankie St. in Silver City. Performance. Info: 575-654-4144. Deming/Luna County Black Range Artist Exhibition opening reception — 1-3 p.m. at the Deming Art Center, 100 S. Gold in Deming. Info: 575-546-3663. Las Cruces/Mesilla El Paso Pro Musica presents Ying String Quartet with Zuill Bailey — 2 p.m. at the Rio Grande Theatre in Las Cruces. Info: 915833-9400. The Servant of Two Masters — starts at 2 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. at the New Mexico State University Center for the Arts. A French comedy written in 1746 and translated to English, the play is based on a style of theatre called “Commedia dell’arte.� Info: 575-646-1420.

Ruidoso/Lincoln County Arts and Crafts Fair — 9 a.m.-5p.m. at the Boys and Girls Club of Sierra Blanca, 134 Reese Drive in Ruidoso. Info: 575-808-8338. New Mexico State Open Chili Cook-Off and Chile Society Pod Chili Cook-Off — tasting starts at noon at the Ruidoso Downs Racetrack and Casino. Info: 575-3906184. Sunday under the Stars — 6-11 p.m. at the Inn of the Mountain Gods in Mescalero outdoors and free live music followed by a movie. Info: 575464-7777.

TUESDAY, OCT. 4

Silver City/Grant County Storytime — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-5 and their caregivers. Info: 575-5383672. Trivia Night — 6:30 p.m. at Burgers & Brownies & Beer Oh My! At 619 N. Bullard St. Gift certificate prizes for top three teams. Info: 575-597-6469. Las Cruces/Mesilla How to prepare and submit photos for the DAPC Pnoto-of-the-Year Competition — 7 p.m. with the Dona Ana Photography Club, at the Southwest Environmental Center, 275 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. Info: www.daphotoclub.org.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5

Silver City/Grant County Babytime Sing and Play — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-12 months and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-3672. Why Hawks, Pigeons and Some Owls Don’t Like Me — Noon at the Western New Mexico University Global Resource Center ABC Room, 12th and Kentucky streets in Silver City. The Western Institute of Lifelong Learning continues its free series with Linda Moore talking about her experiences trapping, banding and rehabilitating birds. Info: 575-5386835. Future Engineers — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Creative hands on construction fun with Lego, K’NEX and Strawbees for children 6-12. Info: 575-538-3672. Wild for Wild Flowers — 7 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Meeting House, 3845 North Swan Street, Silver City. The Silver City Photography Club hosts this event with Lisa Mandelkern, award-winning Las Cruces photographer. Info: 860-670-4543.

THURSDAY, OCT. 6

The Big Ditch Crickets play in San Lorenzo Oct. 1 and in Silver City Oct. 22. (Courtesy Photo)

Silver City/Grant County “In Defense of Food� — 4-7 p.m. at the Silco Theater, 311 N. Bullard St. in Silver City. Free film screening based on a book by Michael Pollan. WildWorks Youth Space — 4 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Space for youth 10-yers and older to hang out, experiment, create and more. Info: 575-538-3672. Women in the Arts: Tina Mion — 5:30 p.m. at Western New Mexico University, Light Hall Patio and Theater. Artist Mion talks about her artistic process. Info: 575-538-6469. Trivia Night at the Little Toad Creek Brewery & Distillery — 7 p.m. at 200 N. Bullard St. Info: 575-9566144.

Las Cruces/Mesilla Business Showcase 2016 — noon4 p.m. at the Mesilla Valley Mall, 700 S. Telshor Blvd. in Las Cruces. Info: 575-524-1968. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Fair — all day at the Sierra County Fairgrounds on S. Broadway in Truth or Consequences. Info: 575-894-2375. Sierra Twirlers Square Dance Club dance — 6-8 p.m. at New Mexico

Old Time Fiddler’s Playhouse, 710 Elm St. Mainstream dancing every Thursday evening. Cost is $3 per person; no charge to come and watch. Visitors always welcome. Info: 505-804-3842 or 575-313-9971.

FRIDAY, OCT. 7

Silver City/Grant County Popcorn Fridays — all day at 614 N. Bullard St. Free popcorn and food samples. Info: 575-388-2343. Open Technology Lab — 2-4 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library,

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515 W. College Ave. Practice computer skills and ask questions. Info: 575-538-3672. Red Dot ArtFest & Studio Tour opening reception — 5-7 p.m. at the Seedboat Gallery, 214 W. Yankie St. in Silver City. Includes a preview show. This officially kicks off the 9-day event featuring art shows, receptions, studio tours, demonstrations, workshops and lectures. Info: silvercityart.com. Late Cenozic Vertebrate Fossils form the Gila Region — 7 p.m. at

Western New Mexico University’s Global Resource Center. Dr. Gary Morgan, curator of paleontology at the New Mexico Museum of Naturel History and Science is the presenter. Info: 575-388-2386. Brandon Ridenour Concert — 7 p.m. at Western New Mexico University Fine Arts Center in Silver City. Info: 575-538-5862. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Fair — all day at

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Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 6-9 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630. 27th Annual Lincoln County Cowboy Symposium — All day at the Ruidoso Downs Race Track. Cowboy festival with storytellers, music, western artists, swing dancing, horse demonstrations, kids’ rodeo and World Championship Chuckwagon Competition. Info: 575-378-4431. Las Cruces/Mesilla An Evening with Yolanda Martinez and special guest Denny Guerrero — 7:30 p.m. at the Rio Grande Theatre in Las Cruces. Contemporary, Latin and drumming music. Info: 575-523-6403. “Agamemnon” — 8 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. A king’s decision to sacrifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflict lasting damage on his family in this play. Info: 575-523-1223. Socorro/Socorro County Alamo Indian Days — All day on the Alamo Reservation. Includes parade, Indian market, pow-wow, traditional Navajo song and dance and more. Info: 575-854-3699. Socorrofest — 6-10 p.m. on the Socorro Plaza. Music, arts, food and children’s events. Info: www.socorrofest.com.

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the Sierra County Fairgrounds on S. Broadway in Truth or Consequences. Info: 575-894-2375. Alamogordo/Tularosa/ Otero County To the Sun and Back Launch Pad Lecture — 9 a.m. at the New Mexico Museum of Space History with Museum Education Director Dave Dooling who will talk about 70 years of observing the sun from space. Info: 575-437-2840.

SATURDAY, OCT. 8

Silver City/Grant County Silver City Farmer’s Market — 8:30 a.m.-noon on 7th Street off Bullard. Info: 575-654-4104. Healing Arts Fair — 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at 1300 Bennet St. in Silver City. Info: 480-707-7893. Fort Bayard Walking Tour — 9:30 a.m.-noon, Fort Bayard is located two miles north of U.S. Highway 180 at Santa Clara. Info: 575-956-3294. Fiddling Friends — noon-12:45 p.m. at the HUB in Silver City as part of the Red Dot Art Fiesta. Info: 575534-0298. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Fair — all day at the Sierra County Fairgrounds on S. Broadway in Truth or Consequences. Info: 575-894-2375. Sierra County Farmers Market — 8:30-11:30 a.m. at Ralph Edwards Park in Truth of Consequences. Info: 575-894-9375. Second Saturday Art Hop — 6-9 p.m. in downtown Truth of Consequences. Info:promotions@torcmainstreet.org. Old Time Fiddlers Saturday Night Dance — 7-9 p.m. at 710 Elm Street in Truth or Consequences. Info 575744-9137. Las Cruces/Mesilla Discovering Providence Cone walk — 7:30 a.m. with the Southwest Environmental Center. Register to join the Back by Noon series walk. Info: 575-522-5552. Storytellers of Las Cruces — 10:30 a.m. at both COAS Bookstore locations in Las Cruces. Children who attend receive a $2 book coupon. Winter Container Gardening — 2-3

The Las Cruces Business Showcase takes place at the Mesilla Valley Mall on Oct. 6. (Courtesy Photo) p.m. at the Community Room at Mountain View Coop, 1300 El Paseo Road in Las Cruces. Reservations recommended. Info: 575-323-0903. Southern New Mexico Pride Fall Fest — 5-10 p.m. at the Downtown Mall, La Placita, Las Cruces. Info www.southernnmpride.org. Photography Boot Camp Workshop: Getting Your Camera Off Auto Mode — 9 a.m.-noon with the Dona Ana Photography Club, at the Southwest Environmental Center, 275 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. Info: www.daphotoclub.org. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 7 a.m.-3 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630. 27th Annual Lincoln County Cowboy Symposium — All day at the Ruidoso Downs Race Track. Cowboy festival with storytellers, music, western artists, swing dancing, horse demonstrations, kids’ rodeo and World Championship Chuckwagon Competition. Info: 575-378-4431. Chris Tomlin — 8-11 p.m. at the Inn of the Mountain Gods. Contemporary Christian music. Info: innofthemountaingods.com/events/ chris-tomlin-10-8. Socorro/Socorro County Alamo Indian Days — All day on the Alamo Reservation. Includes parade, Indian market, pow-wow, traditional Navajo song and dance and more. Info: 575-854-3699. Socorrofest — 6-10 p.m. on the Socorro Plaza. Music, arts, food and children’s events. Info: www. socorrofest.com. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County SoulCollage Workshop — 1-3 p.m. at 400 N. Broadway St. in TorC. Creative art and journaling with Vicki Evans. Info: colorbox2@yahoo.com.

SUNDAY, OCT. 9

Silver City/Grant County Clay Architectural Workshop with Kathryn Allen — 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Kathryn Allen Clay Studio, 601 Erie St. Bayard. $50 includes all materials. Info: 575-537-3332. Ray Cressler — 1-3 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House, 112 West Yankie St. in Silver City. Performance. Info: 575-654-4144. Ruidoso/Lincoln County 27th Annual Lincoln County Cowboy Symposium — All day at the Ruidoso Downs Race Track. Cowboy festival with storytellers, music, western artists, swing dancing, horse demonstrations, kids’ rodeo and World Championship Chuckwagon Competition. Info: 575-378-4431. Las Cruces/Mesilla Brandon Ridenour Virtuoso Trumpeter— 3 p.m. at the Rio Grande Theatre, Downtown Las Cruces. Info:

575-405-7429. Socorro/Socorro County Alamo Indian Days — All day on the Alamo Reservation. Includes parade, Indian market, pow-wow, traditional Navajo song and dance and more. Info: 575-854-3699. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Fair — all day at the Sierra County Fairgrounds on S. Broadway in Truth or Consequences. Info: 575-894-2375.

MONDAY, OCT. 10

Silver City/Grant County Widowed and Single Persons of Grant County — 10:30 a.m. at Cross Point Assembly of God Church, 11600 U.S Highway E. Nancy Miller leads with Halloween songs. Info: 575-537-3643. Future Engineers — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Creative hands on construction fun with Lego, K’NEX and Strawbees for children 6-12. Info: 575-538-3672.

TUESDAY, OCT. 11

Silver City/Grant County Storytime — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-5 and their caregivers. Info: 575-5383672. Mask Making — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Special fall break craft activity for children with free popcorn. Info: 575-538-3672. Trivia Night — 6:30 p.m. at Burgers & Brownies & Beer Oh My! At 619 N. Bullard St. Gift certificate prizes for top three teams. Info: 575-597-6469. Deming/Luna County Audubon New Mexico Meeting — 5:15 p.m. at La Fonda Restaurant, 601 E. Pine St. in Deming. The guest speaker is local wildlife photographer, Dan Gauss. Info: ic_kn@ audubon.org.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 12

Silver City/Grant County Babytime Sing and Play — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-12 months and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-3672. Harvesting Mesquite Community Forum — 11 a.m. at the Silver City Food Coop, 614 N. Bullard St. Bart Hiatt is the presenter. Info: 575-3882343. “Jenkins” Ear and Other Catalytic Events in History — Noon at the Western New Mexico University Global Resource Center ABC Room, 12th and Kentucky streets in Silver City. The Western Institute of Lifelong Learning continues its free series with Bill Baldwin talking about a bizarre but seemingly minor incident on the high seas in 1731 that


DESERT EXPOSURE sparked a global conflict and other catalytic sparks from world history. Info: 575-538-6835. Future Engineers — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Creative hands on construction fun with Lego, K’NEX and Strawbees for children 6-12. Info: 575-538-3672. Las Cafeteras — 7 p.m. at Western New Mexico University Light Hall or the Gardens. A cultural performance event. Info: 575-538-6469. Trivia Night at the Little Toad Creek Brewery & Distillery — 7 p.m. at 200 N. Bullard St. Info: 575956-6144. Las Cruces/Mesilla Second Wednesday Evening Market and ART-IN—5 to 9 p.m. Artists doing demonstrations. Info: www. lascrucesarts.org.

THURSDAY, OCT. 13

Silver City/Grant County Storytime — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-5 and their caregivers. Info: 575-5383672. WildWorks Youth Space — 4 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Sugar skulls in a space for youth 10-yers and older to hang out, experiment, create and more. Info: 575-538-3672. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra Twirlers Square Dance Club dance — 6-8 p.m. at New Mexico Old Time Fiddler’s Playhouse, 710 Elm St. Mainstream dancing every Thursday evening. Cost is $3 per person; no charge to come and watch. Visitors always welcome. Info: 505-804-3842 or 575-313-9971.

FRIDAY, OCT. 14

Silver City/Grant County Poet David Chorlton reads — 1-2 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House, 112 West Yankie St. in Silver City. Phoenix poet “Writing in the Desert.” Info: 575-654-4144. Tech Workshop: Microsoft Word — 2 -4 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Includes templates and ribbon functions. Info: 575-538-3672. Las Cruces/Mesilla Native American jewelry sale and rug appraisal session — 4-8 p.m. at the Branigan Cultural Center, 501 North Main Street in Las Cruces. This is part of the Foundation for Las Cruces Museums Third Annual Navajo Rug Auction. Info: www.foundtionlcm.com. “Agamemnon” — 8 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. A king’s decision to sacrifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflict lasting damage on his family in this play. Info: 575-523-1223. Ruidoso Lincoln County Oktoberfest — 5-11 p.m. at the Ruidoso Convention Center, 111 Sierra Blanca Drive, Ruidoso. Food, beer, music, arts & crafts and a kinderhall. Info: 575-857-6171.

SATURDAY, OCT. 15

Silver City/Grant County Silver City Quarterly Review First Anniversary — 3 p.m. reception at the McCray Gallery at WNMU. Author readings of poetry and novel excerpts are from 4-6 p.m. Info: d.chris.lemme@gmail.com. Folk Series presents Hubby Jenkins — 7:30-10 p.m. at the Buckhorn Opera House at 32 Main St. in Pinos Altos. Multi-instrumentalist shares

OCTOBER 2016 • 49 his love and knowledge of old-time American music. Info: 575-538-2505.

member photos shown. Info: www. daphotoclub.org.

Ruidoso Lincoln County Oktoberfest — noon-11 p.m. at the Ruidoso Convention Center, 111 Sierra Blanca Drive, Ruidoso. Food, beer, music, arts & crafts and a kinderhall. Info: 575-857-6171. Las Cruces/Mesilla Rug auction preview, demonstration and auction— 9-11:30 a.m. preview, 11 a.m. demonstration for children, with auction starting at noon at the Branigan Cultural Center, 501 North Main Street in Las Cruces. This is part of the Foundation for Las Cruces Museums Third Annual Navajo Rug Auction. Info: www. foundtionlcm.com. Storytellers of Las Cruces — 10:30 a.m. at both COAS Bookstore locations in Las Cruces. Children who attend receive a $2 book coupon. Plant for Spring Blooms Gardening — 2-3 p.m. at the Community Room at Mountain View Coop, 1300 El Paseo Road in Las Cruces. Reservations recommended. Info: 575-323-0903. Columbus Cannoli Making Class and party — 6 p.m. with the Italian Culture Club of Las Cruces. To attend contact organizer Al “Chance” Cella. Info: Al_Chance@Me.com. Tularosa/Otero County The Tularosa Farmers Market — 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. on the corner of Bookout Road and Central Ave. Seasonal market runs every Saturday morning to Sept. 3. Senior WIC checks accepted. Info: 575-5852297. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 7 a.m.-3 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19

Kathryn Allen is offering a Clay architectural Workshop in Bayard Oct. 9 (Courtesy Photo) rifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflict lasting damage on his family in this play. Info: 575-523-1223. Border Jazz with Roman Chip — 7 p.m. at First Christian Church, 1809 El Paseo in Las Cruces, preceded by a Dessert Social at 6:30 p.m. Info: 575-640-8752.

TUESDAY, OCT. 18

Silver City/Grant County Storytime — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-5 and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-

3672. Trivia Night — 6:30 p.m. at Burgers & Brownies & Beer Oh My! At 619 N. Bullard St. Gift certificate prizes for top three teams. Info: 575-597-6469. Las Cruces/Mesilla Three Programs: How to Apply for (Photo) Art Shows, Introduction to Sally Mann and Elements of Design — 7 p.m. with the Dona Ana Photography Club, at the Southwest Environmental Center, 275 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. Presentations by Storm Semay and Karen Conley and

Silver City/Grant County Babytime Sing and Play — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-12 months and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-3672. The National Park Service is 100 Years Old, What Does that Mean? — Noon at the Western New Mexico University Global Resource Center ABC Room, 12th and Kentucky streets in Silver City. The Western Institute of Lifelong Learning continues its free series with Bill Wade talks about what the National Park System has meant to the country and the world. Info: 575-538-6835. Future Engineers — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Creative hands on construction fun with Lego, K’NEX and Strawbees for children 6-12. Info: 575-538-3672. Trivia Night at the Little Toad

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Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Farmers Market — 8:30-11:30 a.m. at Ralph Edwards Park in Truth of Consequences. Info: 575-894-9375. Old Time Fiddlers Saturday Night Dance — 7-9 p.m. at 710 Elm Street in Truth or Consequences. Info 575744-9137.

SUNDAY, OCT. 16

Silver City/Grant County Brandon Perrault and Kevin Cline — 1-3 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House, 112 West Yankie St. in Silver City. Performance. Info: 575654-4144. Red Dot Art Fest & Studio Tour Champagne and Chocolates closing reception — 4-6 p.m. at the Seedboat Gallery, 214 W. Yankie St. in Silver City. Includes a preview show. Info: silvercityart.com. Alamogordo/Otero County Turquoise & Silver Tea — 2 p.m. at the Sgt. Willie Estrada Memorial Civic Center, 800 E. First Street in Alamogordo. Fashion, entertainment, door prizes, refreshment and a silent auction to raise funds for the Flickinger Center Guild. Info: 575437-2202. White Sands Full Moon night with the Chance Ensemble — 6:30 p.m. at White Sands National Monument. The Chance Ensemble, an internationally acclaimed group, will perform a narrative concert entitled “John Muir, University of the Wilderness.” Info; www.nps.gov/whsa. Las Cruces/Mesilla “Agamemnon” — 2:30 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. A king’s decision to sac-

3 RD ANNUAL

FRIDAY, OCT. 14 Auction by R.B. Burnham & Co. JEWELRY SALE AND APPRAISALS: 4:00 PM - 8:00 PM (Native American rugs, baskets, jewelry. Sorry no Kachina dolls or paintings) APPRAISALS $10 EACH ITEM SATURDAY, OCT. 15

There will be approximately 250 lots of rugs and other Native American Art offered. Proceeds benefit Navajo weavers, Las Cruces Museums and the Foundation for Las Cruces Museums. ADMISSION IS FREE.

AUCTION PREVIEW IS AT 9:00 AM - 11:30 AM At the Branigan Cultural Center, Weavers will be present from 9:00 AM to closing, to answer questions. They will give a special 501 North Main, Las Cruces presentation for children at 11:00 AM. AUCTION STARTS AT NOON For Information go to www.foundationlcm.com www.facebook.com/FoundationLCMuseums/

This is a fundraising event to support the Las Cruces Museums: Branigan Cultural Center, Museum of Art, Museum of Nature and Science and Railroad Museum. For information call (575) 541-2154.


50 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

Creek Brewery & Distillery — 7 p.m. at 200 N. Bullard St. Info: 575-956-6144. Las Cruces/Mesilla Beginner Bird Walk — 7:45 a.m. at Tellbrook Park, 4290 E. Winchester Road in the Las Alturas area with the Mesilla Valley Audubon Society. Info: way1mike@yahoo.com.

THURSDAY, OCT. 20

Silver City/Grant County Tech Workshop: Microsoft Excel — 10 a.m. to noon at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. How to use Excel for personal and business accounting. Info: 575-5383672. WildWorks Youth Space — 4 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Space for youth 10-yers and older to hang out, experiment, create and more. Info: 575-538-3672. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra Twirlers Square Dance Club dance — 6-8 p.m. at New Mexico Old Time Fiddler’s Playhouse, 710 Elm St. Mainstream dancing every Thursday evening. Cost is $3 per person; no charge to come and watch. Visitors always welcome. Info: 505-804-3842 or 575-313-9971.

Las Cruces/Mesilla “Agamemnon” — 8 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. A king’s decision to sacrifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflict lasting damage on his family in this play. Info: 575-523-1223.

FRIDAY, OCT. 21

Silver City/Grant County Ancient Sea Ledges, Deep Rocky Canyons, Lava Flows, Ice Caves and Other Challenging Places Mosses Hide — 7 p.m. on the second floor of WNMU’s Harlan Hall, corner of 12th and Alabama streets. This is a Gila Native Plant Society meeting featuring a presentation by Russ Kleinman. Info: gilanative@gmail.com. Las Cruces/Mesilla Lady Belladonna’s Night Shades — 6 p.m. reception, 7 p.m. screening at the Rio Grande Theater, 211 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. Premier of film made by local independent filmmakers. Info: www.ladybelladonna.com. “Agamemnon” — 8 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. A king’s decision to sacrifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflict lasting damage on his family in this play. Info: 575523-1223.

Have you seen our new jewelry?

MUSEUM SOCIETY B O O K & G I F T S TO R E

Las Cruces/Mesilla Birds of the Franklin Mountains walk — 7 and 8 a.m. at Franklin Mountains State Park in El Paso with the Southwest Environmental Center. Register to join the Back by Noon series walk. Info: 575522-5552. Choosing & Planting Fruit Trees — 2-3 p.m. at the Community Room at Mountain View Coop, 1300 El Paseo Road in Las Cruces. Reservations recommended. Info: 575-323-0903.

312 WEST BROADWAY STREE T SILVER CITY, NM | 575.538.5921 TUE - FRI, 9 - 4:30 / SAT & SUN, 10 - 4 www.silvercitymuseum.org

SUNDAY, OCT. 23

A Healing Arts Fair lasts from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Silver City on Oct. 8. (Courtesy Photo) Alamogordo/Otero County Downtown Merchant’s Art Walk — 6-8 p.m. Local artists display artwork with craft vendors, food and entertainment. Shops open late. Info: 575-312-5065. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 6-9 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630.

SATURDAY, OCT. 22

Silver City/Grant County Silver City Food Co-op Artisan Market — 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 614 N. Bullard St. Info: 575-388-2343 or www.silvercityfoodcoop.com. Big Ditch Crickets Community Dance — 7-9 p.m. at the Church of Harmony, 609 Arizona St., Silver City. Info: 575-534-0298. Stars-N-Parks at City of Rocks— 7:30-9 p.m. at City of Rocks State Park. John Gilkison presents the setting of the Milky Way Galaxy and more. Info: 575-635-0982. Alamogordo/Tularosa/ Otero County The Tularosa Farmers Market — 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. on the corner of

Bookout Road and Central Ave. Seasonal market runs every Saturday morning to Sept. 3. Senior WIC checks accepted. Info: 575-585-2297. Zoo Boo — 8 a.m.-noon at the Alameda Park Zoo. Includes trick-ortreat booths, costume contest and more for chilsren up to 10 years old. Info: 575-439-4290. Deming/Luna County 11th Annual Pancho’s Car Show — 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at Pancho Villa State Park in Columbus. Info: panchovillastateparkfriendsgroup.org. Ruidoso/Carrizozo/ Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 7 a.m.-3 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Farmers Market — 8:30-11:30 a.m. at Ralph Edwards Park in Truth of Consequences. Info: 575-894-9375. Old Time Fiddlers Saturday Night Dance — 7-9 p.m. at 710 Elm Street in Truth or Consequences. Info 575744-9137.

The Silver City Museum Society Thanks the following Business Members

Silver City/Grant County Mike Norris — 1-3 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House, 112 West Yankie St. in Silver City. Performance. Info: 575-654-4144. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Brett Eldredge — 8 p.m. at the Inn of the Mountain Gods. Country music. Info: innofthemountaingods.com/event/ brett-eldredge/. Las Cruces/Mesilla “Agamemnon” — 2:30 p.m. at the Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Main St. in Las Cruces. A king’s decision to sacrifice his daughter and turn the tide of war inflict lasting damage on his family in this play. Info: 575-523-1223.

TUESDAY, OCT. 25

Silver City/Grant County Storytime — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-5 and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-3672. Trivia Night — 6:30 p.m. at Burgers & Brownies & Beer Oh My! At 619 N. Bullard St. Gift certificate prizes for top three teams. Info: 575-597-6469.

MUSEUM SOCIETY 312 W. Broadway St. Silver City, NM 88061

Top Mark Enterprises, LLC. 815 N. Black St Silver - Silver City NM 88061

314 14th Street, Silver City NM 88061

1000 W. College St. Silver City, NM 88061

608 N. Bullard St, Silver City, NM 88061

2290 Superior Street, Silver City, NM 88061

P.O. Box 1318, Silver City, NM 88062

910 E. 32nd St, Silver City, NM 88061

1313 E. 32nd Street, Silver City, NM 88061

Lawley Toyota 2750 Highway 180 E, Silver City, NM 88061

207 S. Bullard St, Silver City, NM 88061

#2 Caballero, Caballero Hwy 180 East East, Silver City City, NM 88061

-Business Memberships to the Museum -

Together, we enrich the quality of life in our communities and share the stories of southwest New Mexico to thousands of visitors each year.


DESERT EXPOSURE

Silver City/Grant County WildWorks Youth Space: Jack o’lanterns — 4 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Space for youth 10-yers and older to hang out, experiment, create and more. Info: 575-538-3672. Edwina and Charles Milner Women in the Arts featuring Valerie Wilson Plame — 5:30 p.m. reception, 6:30 p.m lecture at Western New Mexico University Light Hall and patio. Info: 575-5386469. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra Twirlers Square Dance Club dance — 6-8 p.m. at New Mexico Old Time Fiddler’s Playhouse, 710 Elm St. Mainstream dancing every Thursday evening. Cost is $3 per person; no charge to come and watch. Visitors always welcome. Info: 505-804-3842 or 575-313-9971.

FRIDAY, OCT. 28

Silver City/Grant County Popcorn Fridays — all day at 614 N. Bullard St. Free popcorn and food samples. Info: 575-388-2343. Deming/Luna County Guatemalan Mercado — 11 a.m.4 p.m. at the Deming Art Center, 100 S. Gold in Deming. Info: 575546-3663. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 6-9 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630. Las Cruces/Mesilla Promoting Art in Las Cruces, Growing New Mexico’s Creative Economy — noon at the Main Street Bistro next door to the Rio Grande Theatre in Las Cruces. Info: 575-523-6403. “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” — 7 p.m. at the Rio Grande Theatre in Las Cruces. Presented by A Children’s Theater of the Mesilla Valley. Info: 575-523-6403.

Las Cruces/Mesilla Storytellers of Las Cruces — 10:30 a.m. at both COAS Bookstore locations in Las Cruces. Children who attend receive a $2 book coupon. “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” — 1 p.m. at the Rio Grande Theatre in Las Cruces. Presented by A Children’s Theater of the Mesilla Valley. Info: 575-523-6403. Xeriscape Design Using Drought Tolerant Plants — 2-3 p.m. at the Community Room at Mountain View Coop, 1300 El Paseo Road in Las Cruces. Reservations recommended. Info: 575-323-0903. Deming/Luna County Guatemalan Mercado — 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Deming Art Center, 100 S. Gold in Deming. Info: 575-546-3663. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Farmer’s Market — 7 a.m.-3 p.m. at All American Park in Ruidoso Downs. Info: 575-808-0630. Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra County Farmers Market — 8:30-11:30 a.m. at Ralph Edwards Park in Truth of Consequences. Info: 575-894-9375. Old Time Fiddlers Saturday Night Dance — 7-9 p.m. at 710 Elm Street in Truth or Consequences. Info 575744-9137. Stars-N-Parks at Caballo Lake State Park — 8-9:30 p.m. at Caballo Lake State Park. John Gilkison presents Mars and Saturn in the southwest, and the Summer Milky Way Galaxy. Info: 575-635-0982.

MONDAY, OCT. 30

Silver City/Grant County Silver City Dias de los Muertos — 1-3 p.m. Mariachi Music; 2-3 p.m. storytellers; 3:30 p.m. parade, all centered around Market and Texas streets in Silver City. The Silco Theater is showing “The Book of Life,” at 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. Info: 575-590-1587. David Gideon — 1-3 p.m. at the Yankie Creek Coffee House, 112 West Yankie St. in Silver City. Performance. Info: 575-654-4144.

MONDAY, OCT. 31

Silver City/Grant County Halloween Storytime — 10:30

a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Children 0-5 are invited to listen to stories and dress up in their costumes. Info: 575-538-3672. Silver City Dias de los Muertos — 7-9 p.m. at the Western New Mexico University Fine Arts Theatre. Talking will be Dr. Felipe de Ortego y Gasca followed by a performance by Ballet Folklorico de la Universidad Autonoma de Cd. Juarez. Info: 575-590-1587.

TUESDAY, NOV. 1

Silver City/Grant County Storytime — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-5 and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-3672.

Silver City Dias de los Muertos — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Museum, the starting place for Mariachi Canto a Mi Tierra de la UACJ procession. 7-5 p.m. at the Miller Library will be Ofrendas, talks and WNMU’s Mariachi Plata. Info: 575-590-1587. Trivia Night — 6:30 p.m. at Burgers & Brownies & Beer Oh My! At 619 N. Bullard St. Gift certificate prizes for top three teams. Info: 575-597-6469. Ruidoso/Lincoln County Elf the Musical — 7 p.m. at the Spencer Theater for the Performing Arts in Alto. Info: 575-336-4800.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 2

Silver City/Grant County Silver City Dias de los Muertos

— 6:30 p.m. at WNMU Parotti Hall. Catalino Delgado Trunk, artist, and a Lecture by Papel Picado followed by a Reception and community Ofrenda at the McCray Gallery from 7:30-9 p.m.. Info: 575-590-1587.

THURSDAY, NOV. 3

Truth or Consequences/ Sierra County Sierra Twirlers Square Dance Club dance — 6-8 p.m. at New Mexico Old Time Fiddler’s Playhouse, 710 Elm St. Mainstream dancing every Thursday evening. Cost is $3 per person; no charge to come and watch. Visitors always welcome. Info: 505-804-3842 or 575-3139971.

Thurs., Oct. 6, 2016 5:30p | Meet the Artist Reception Light Hall Patio 6:30p | Lecture Light Hall Auditorium FREE Admission

LECTURE SERIES

THURSDAY, OCT. 27

SATURDAY, OCT. 29

Silver City/Grant County Goosebumps event — noon to 1 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Celebrate R.L. Stein’s “Goosebumps” series with games, fake blood and DIY slime. Geared toward children 6-12. Info: 575-538-3672.

Edwina & Charles Milner Women in the Arts Lecture:

Tina Mion

Tina Mion’s Exhibit Opening, McCray Gallery Jan. 19, 2017 Co-Sponsor: WILL

PERFORMANCE EVENT

Silver City/Grant County Babytime Sing and Play — 10:30 a.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Designed for children ages 0-12 months and their caregivers. Info: 575-538-3672. Future Engineers — 4-5 p.m. at the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. Creative hands on construction fun with Lego, K’NEX and Strawbees for children 6-12. Info: 575-538-3672.

Tina Mion is an American contemporary artist, working in oil paint and pastels. Her work is displayed in the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery.

Thurs., Oct. 13, 2016 7:00p | Doors open at 6:30p WNMU Light Hall Theater Tickets — $10 each FREE with WNMU Mustang Card

Las Cafeteras

Co-Sponsor: Western Institute for Lifelong Learning (WILL)

Las Cafeteras create a vibrant musical fusion with a unique East LA sound and a community-focused political message of positive change. Part of WNMU Glam Week.

Thurs., Oct. 27, 2016 5:30p | Meet the Artist Reception Light Hall Patio 6:30p | Lecture Light Hall Auditorium FREE Admission

LECTURE SERIES

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 26

OCTOBER 2016 • 51

Valerie Plame

Co-Sponsor: Western Institute for Lifelong Learning (WILL)

Valerie Plame is a former operations officer of the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and New York Times best-selling Author.

6:30p | Lecture Parotti Hall 7:30p | Opening McCray Gallery FREE Admission — Part of the WNMU Day of the Dead Celebration

EXHIBIT OPENING

LECTURE SERIES

Wed., Nov. 2, 2016

Edwina & Charles Milner Women in the Arts Lecture:

Catalina Delgado-Trunk Co-Sponsor: WILL

Silver City celebrates Dias de los Muertos with a parade and other events Oct. 30 through Nov. 2. (Photo by Tom Vaughn)

Growing up in Mexico, Trunk developed a lifelong love of Mesoamerican cultural traditions, especially that of papel picado (cut paper).

Online Event Calendar wnmu.edu/culture Purchase Tickets Online or Call: Cultural Affairs 575-538-6469


52 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

Above: The majestic dragon, Magellan, in Young Park Lake at the Renaissance ArtsFaire in Las Cruces. (Photo by Emmitt Booher) Right: A jouster looks over the field as he prepares to meet his enemy at the 2015 Renaissance ArtsFaire in Las Cruces. (Photo by Elva K. Österreich)

REN FAIRE • KATHLEEN ALBERS

S

45th Annual Renaissance ArtsFaire

tep through the gates at Young Park on Nov. 5 and 6 and find yourself transported back in time 500 years and shifted in place from Las Cruces to merry old England. Queen Sherrie is on the throne and her court is there, too, in all their grandeur. You find yourself surrounded by peasants and nobles of the kingdom enjoying a pleasant day at the faire, perusing arts and crafts, being astonished by magicians and jousters, gnawing on turkey legs, and cheering on knights in armor as they joust with lances from atop their mighty horses.

You’re now part of an experience that lets you become as immersed in days gone by as you wish: the 45th Annual Renaissance ArtsFaire, hosted by the Doña Ana Arts Council. The 45th faire features fine art and handcrafted items from around the Southwest, a variety of food offered by and supporting area non-profit organizations, entertainment on several stages, a beer and wine garden, the new and improved Magellan the Dragon, who will yet again be in his rightful place on the lake, and more time to explore it all, with new hours from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.

505-469-7505 sivaraven@gmail.com

Earth Matters A show about earthly matters that impact us all!

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EVERY Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday at 10am, Thursday evenings at 8pm Gila/Mimbres Podcasts available: http://gmcr.org/category/earth-matters

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on Saturday and 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Sunday. This family-friendly event welcomes those who wish to dress in period attire and adopt a British accent for the weekend as well as visitors who would rather stay true to 2016 while observing life as it was five centuries ago during the Renaissance period. There’s plenty for the wee ones to do with a special Children’s Realm featuring entertainment and special activities including a Scavenger Hunt with prizes. The Order of Epona’s jousters on horseback will return for two shows daily at 10:15 a.m. and 2:15 p.m., giving faire visitors an opportunity to experience the entertainment of Renaissance royalty. Jousters will charge each other while mounted on sturdy steeds, seeking to knock each other from their horses. Visitors can rowdily cheer on the knight of their choice and perhaps bestow the winner with a favor. The Greyhounds of Fairhaven will again be at the faire, spotlighting rescued racing greyhounds that are now enjoying a life of leisure and showing their regal side. Stroll down the path and you will find Robert the Ratcatcher at the top of the hill with his “Ratapult” where he flings pesky vermin (actually, they’re beanbags shaped like rats) with his hand-crafted catapult. There will be dozens of artists offering arts and crafts of all kinds, including a wide range of contemporary art. Step back in time again by exploring the Artistas del Camino Real, who will be demonstrating Spanish and Native art forms that were developed 500 years ago in what became New Mexico, making this a New Mexico True event. Young artisans aged 16 and under, have the opportunity to peddle their wares at no charge. Young artists may contact the Doña Ana Arts Council to find out how they can par-

Children learn about weaving from one of the Artistas del Camino Real at the Renaissance ArtsFaire. (Photo by Emmitt Booher)

ticipate. Visitors can commemorate the 45th year of this event by purchasing a hand-made ceramic goblet made by local potter Andrew Chapel and decorated with the Renaissance ArtsFaire logo. Dozens of food booths in two areas will ease the hunger and quench the thirst of faire-goers. Food purchases support local non-profits, including the return of the Unitarian-Universalist Church with its ever-popular Chocoholic Frolic booth. Those who want to relax and sip an adult beverage or two can spend time in the Dragon’s Eye Tavern and sample St. Claire’s wine and local craft beers from area breweries such as High Desert Brewery, Pecan Grill, Spotted Dog Brewery, and Bosque Brewing Company. Avoid parking at Young Park by taking advantage of The Royal Carriage — a free park and ride running between the southwest corner of the Mesilla Valley Mall and Young Park every 15 minutes.

There is limited accessible parking onsite at the park and parking volunteers will be there maintaining order in their appointed realm. Tickets to the Renaissance ArtsFaire are $8 per person and children 12 and under enter free. VIP Passes are $60, which includes two-person one-day entry, access to the VIP tent with refreshments and up-front views of jousting, photo ops with jousters, preferred parking for one vehicle, and two vintage Ren Faire T-shirts. For out-of-town guests, a New Mexico True VIP All Weekend Package is available through the Hotel Encanto: $100 includes two-person, all weekend entry, access to the VIP tent, photo ops with Ren Faire Royalty and jousters, preferred parking for one vehicle, two vintage Ren Faire T-shirts, and reserved seating at the Nov. 5t event at the Rio Grande Theatre. See www.HotelEncanto.com for details. More information can be found online at www.daarts. org or by calling 575-523-6403.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 53

BRIDGE LESSONS

Dianne Hamilton and Priscilla Lucero of Silver City are named Women of Distinction during a luncheon in Las Cruces. Hamilton is a state representative for Grant County and Lucero is co-chairwoman of the Grant County Community Health Council. (Photo by Elva K Österreich)

GOOD EXAMPLES

Girl Scouts Honor Women of Distinction

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irl Scouts of the Desert Southwest hosted its fourth annual Women of Distinction luncheon which honored nine influential women “who make the world a better place,” according to the program for the event held Thursday, Sept. 15 at Hotel Encanto. Nine women were recognized for their individual contributions by the Las Cruces area Girl Scouts of the Desert Southwest, which, for the second year in a row, boasted the biggest increases in membership in the country.

Master of Ceremonies Carrie Hamblen introduced guest speaker Tammara Anderton, vice president of business development at Spaceport America, who spoke on her experiences around the globe before coming home to Las Cruces to promote efficient and effective access to space. Honored as women of distinction were: Lori English, Dianne Hamilton, Barbara Hubbard, Priscilla Lucero, Olivia Lerma McDonald, Ann Palormo, Arianna Parsons, Renay Scott and LaJune Smith.

A photo of Senator Pete Domenici as featured in an exhibit at the New Mexico State University Branson Library. (Courtesy NMSU Library)

(786)-338-5970 or puravidabridge@yahoo.com

VOLUNTEERS & PRESENTERS TORIE GRASS LINDA HANNAN NANCY KAMINSKI SONNIE SUSSILLO

Domenici Image Exhibit NMSU Library focus on senator

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Register now for the FREE 5-hour Learn Bridge in a Day seminar on October 22nd 10:00-3:30 at the Belton Bridge Center, 1214 Madrid Avenue. Pre-registration is a must! A light lunch will be served.

THANK YOU for making the 12th Annual Gila River Festival a HUGE success!

PRESERVING HISTORY

he New Mexico State University Library is featuring a new exhibit of images and documents from Sen. Pete V. Domenici’s papers, housed in the NMSU Library Archives and Special Collections Department. The 2016 exhibit focuses on Domenici’s work with mental health, his involvement with the USS Albuquerque, and images from Domenici on the campaign trail. The exhibit, located on the second floor of NMSU’s Branson Library, highlights Domenici’s work with mental healthcare reform, an issue he took personal interest in during his 36 year career in Washington. In addition to Domenici’s legislative efforts alongside senators Paul Wellstone and Edward Kennedy, the Domenicis also

Come Play With Us!

worked privately to support neurological research and the study of mental and behavioral health. Images and documents related to Domenici’s efforts to improve the study and the treatment of the brain will be on display. Also displayed will be photographs of Domenici and his wife, Nancy, at the launching and commissioning ceremonies of the U.S.S. Albuquerque, and images from Domenici’s activities related to political campaigns from the 1970s until his retirement. The display will be viewable until May 2017. For information on the display or the Domenici political papers, contact NMSU Library Political Papers Archivist, Adam Heien, at 575-646-7711 or aheien@nmsu.edu.

Jason Amaro Liz Archuleta Jeff Arterburn Fred Barraza Bayou Seco Hakim Bellamy Michael Berman Cynthia Ann Bettison Justin Blanton Blue Dome Gallery Mark W. Bundy Maria Casler Anna Cherkos Nancy Cliff Joanie Connors Philip Connors John Conway Martha Cooper Tasha Cooper Copper Quail Gallery Michael Darrow Damien Davies Joel Davis Brian Dolton Richard Ducotey Tom Dwyer Marty Eberhardt Ann Marie Elder George Farmer Richard Felger Lisa Fields Dave Foreman Fort Sill Apache Fire Dancers with the Gooday Family Barbara Gabioud Rita Garcia Lemar Gearhart Asher Gelbart Rob Goldfarb Jim Goodkind Margaret Hadderman

Ron Hamm Lee Hannan Jeff Haozous Mary Harwood Colin Diles Hazelbaker Steve Harris Ann Hedlund Jay Hemphill Rodney Henderson Rita Herbst Tom Hines Kevin Holladay Anthony Howell Lydia Huerta Hutchings Fine Art Javalina Lisa Jimenez Kyle Johnson Sarah Johnson Ken Keppeler Siri Khalsa Leyba & Ingalls Arts Lois Duffy Studio Kristin Lundgren Bonnie Buckley Maldonado Alex Mares Marilyn Markel Carol Martin Rebecca Martin Richard Martin Teresa Martinez Larry McDaniel Larry McLaud Jeanie McLerie Cindy Medrano Frank Merritt Roger Metcalfe Kendra Milligan Diana Molina Molly Ramolla Arts Moonstruck Art Gallery Carol Morrison Esteban Muldavin Murray Ryan Visitor Center Nathan Newcomer William Norris

Martyn Pearson Audrey Peterman Harolene Pitts Donna Provost Rick Quezada Ravensong Arts Greg Renfro Alice Rickles Jane Riger Paul Riger Patrick Rogers Joe Rolph George Ruebelmann Lorna Ruebelmann Sharman Apt Russell Dutch Salmon Jenell Scherbel Soul River Syzygy Tileworks The Average Cadaver The Place at the Palace The Roadrunners Joe Saenz AJ Sandoval Todd Schulke Rita Sherwood Silver City Lodger’s Tax Advisory Board Sally Smith Stephanie Smith Peggy Spofford Bill Stites Students of Aldo Leopold Charter School Students of WNMU Rebecca Summer Jarrod Swackhamer Patricia Taber Diane Taliaferro Chris Theulen Jamie Thomson Bill Toth Town of Silver City Tree Spirit Gallery Ron Troy Tom Vaughan Mark Watson Mariam Weidner

Kathy Whiteman Wild West Weaving Ben Williams Yankie Creek Coffeehouse Zoe’s Gallery MAJOR SPONSORS Anonymous Center for Biological Diversity Dennis Weller Photography Fort Sill Apache Tribe Gila Haven Gila/Mimbres Community Radio— KURU Gila Native Plant Society KUNM McCune Charitable Foundation Murray Hotel New Mexico Humanities Council & the National Endowment for the Humanities New Mexico Wilderness Alliance Partially funded by Silver City Lodger’s Tax Pitchfork Ranch Rio Grande Chapter of the Sierra Club Stream Dynamics, Inc. T & E, Inc. Western New Mexico University SPONSORS Ann McMahon Photography Bob Garrett & Mary Hotvedt Bob O’Keefe Carol Morrison & Larry McLaud

Conservation Voters New Mexico Education Fund Far Flung Adventures Sandra & Glenn Griffin/ Gila Tree Thinners Guadalupe’s High-Lonesome Books Shelby Hallmark & Lindee Lennox Ron Henry Sierra Club Southern New Mexico Group Single Socks Southwestern New Mexico Audubon Society The Wilderness Society Vicki Allen, LISW Western Institute for Lifelong Learning FRIENDS Bear Creek Herbs David Rose & Ceil Murray Desert Woman Botanicals Diane Cornelius First New Mexico Bank In Memory of Dr. Ken Marler JoAnne Allen & Jim Brainard Lone Mountain Native Plant Nursery Melvyn Gelb & Mary Ann Finn Morning Star Pauline & Richard Matthews Regalos de la Tierra Pottery Co. Robert Pittman & Kathleen Wigley Ronald Parry Sharyn McDonald Silver Architects Silver City Food Co-op Summit Technical Syzygy Tileworks TheraSpeech


54 • OCTOBER 2016

www.desertexposure.com

One of the water falls along the Missouri that Lewis and Clark once had to skirt which is still going strong. “We loved Great Falls Montana for its friendly folks, history and small town atmosphere,” Sonne said. (Photo by Lee Sonne)

The Teton Mountain Range can be seen from the Idaho side. (Photo by Lee Sonne)

TUMBLEWEEDS • LEE SONNE

A Lifetime Adventure

There is nothing like seeing the country by train

I

would climb back on an Amtrak train again tomorrow. Bob (Douglas) and I had a fantastic time: great food, interesting people and an overload of scenery. I took pictures, but my memory of the vast country in North Dakota, the majestic Tetons, Old Faithful doing its thing, the Columbia River Gorge and the Pacific Ocean will last me for the rest of my life. Starting in Albuquerque, we got off the train in Chicago where a reservation awaited us at the Hyatt at McCormick Place by Lake Michigan. The next day, we got back on and saw Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota and got off at Havre (“have her”) Montana. Our rental car was delivered to the station and we set off for Yellowstone. An overriding memory of the North Country is fat cows lying in knee-high grass chewing their cud, an activity I seldom see in New Mexico. Pulling into Great Falls, Montana, we decided to look for lodging. I asked the Universe/God to help us find the perfect place, and there it was — O’Haire Motor Inn. Built in the early 1960s, O’Haire had not been updated, but rather lovingly maintained. We saw clean carpets, well cared for furniture, and tastefully furnished rooms with the newest mattresses. There was a very popular Tiki bar with a big window behind the bar where costumed “mermaids” swam. Then off we went the next day for Wyoming. We reached Yellowstone Park that afternoon. When I worked in Jackson Hole over 30 years ago, the season didn’t start until July because it was cold and often snowed. Not now. Busload after busload of Asians joined the hundreds of campers and bicyclists we saw. So we looked at the highlights — oh, those mudpots are funny: plop, plup, slurp, poop. Not everyone obeys the signs to stay on the boardwalks and the week we were there a 24-year-

Lee Sonne and Bob Douglas enjoy a journey across the West by train. (Courtesy Photo)

Trains used to be important links between cities and small towns. “There were many gorgeous old train stations along our route, Sonne said. (Photo by Lee Sonne)

old man had walked where he should not have been and died. I guess his genes will not continue. That night we found a B&B in West Yellowstone, Idaho, for $200 and considered ourselves lucky. We had to see Jackson where I used to hang out, and like our Santa Fe, it is boutique-y, expensive and crowded. But the Wort Hotel with the silver dollars encased in plastic on the bar and the Cowboy Bar with saddles to sit on were still the same. We were anxious to get out of there and retreated again to Idaho because it would have taken over a day to crawl through Yellowstone. While we were driving up the eastern edge of Idaho, we went through many tiny towns. The western edge of the Tetons is worth the trip: stunning. Dinner-

time approached and we were skeptical we’d find anything, but again I asked God for guidance (Yes, really). In Ashton, we saw a pizza shop, Five 11 Main. Now how badly can they ruin pizza? So we stopped. Katherine welcomed us and we ordered a pizza and a huckleberry shake. Bob was ecstatic: he said he had not had as good a pizza like he remembered in Italy in a long, long time. Thinking it would be fun to stay overnight in Helena, we changed our minds because all we saw was traffic and shopping malls. A quick call to O’Haire, and we had a room back in Great Falls. Montana is beautiful — the wheat fields do go on forever and over it all this overarching blue sky. The next day, we took in the Lewis and Clark Museum and

saw three of the four falls along the Missouri the town is famous for. The fairly new museum showed how amazing the “Discovery Expedition” really was. They fashioned wheeled wagons to haul the wooden boats with tons of supplies when they had to portage. Between the first and lower floor along the stairway, is a diorama of men pulling the contraption up a 30 degree slope! We stayed two nights and loved that laid back city. Downtown is quiet at night except for a karaoke bar where Bob sang a few of his favorite songs. Then back to Havre. We stopped to clean our car and the owner of the car wash took Bob to see his animal trophies. He has hunted all over the world. Amazing that such a person should live in a small farming community like Havre. He seemed to enjoy talking to us and offered to wash the car if we put the money in the slot. Our lunch at the small Amtrak station was cleaning up all the left over cheese, crackers and a pear. The train was on time and we happily climbed aboard. I celebrated my 76th birthday and was wished the best by all the dining car workers and our table mates. What a great way to dine! Our beautiful country flying by while one tries to make the cheesecake or chocolate mousse last. Our next stop was Portland, Oregon. The Columbia River gorge was spectacular. Miles and miles of nothing but river, trees and meadows. Then Mount Hood appeared. It dominates the landscape for a long time. When we got to Portland, this station had a Metropolitan Room like Chicago, and Los Angeles. This is a special place for sleeping car folks. There are sodas, coffee, sometimes donuts, plush chairs and plug-ins for phones and computers. We were taken to our cars in electric trolleys and handed over to our individual car stewards.

Right fancy. In San Jose, we were picked up by my daughter, Justine, for two nights at their house in Palo Alto. Bob and I are so used to getting up at 6 a.m. or so, that we would tip-toe out to walk three blocks downtown for Peet’s Coffee and the local newspaper. Bob and Justine biked all around the Stanford University campus and that evening we dined at a Japanese restaurant. The prices seemed rather high, $18.50 for a salmon dinner, but then, there are notices that one does not have to tip. So then for a memorable dinner with many little tasty dishes of different items, it was very reasonable. We watched grandson Matthew at his swimming lesson. He is fast! The following week he visited auntie Kira in LA and took surfing lessons. Way to go, Matthew. Justine took us back to San Jose where we rode a bus along 101 to Santa Barbara. What a cute little station with the most extraordinary tree. We couldn’t have survived two weeks mostly on the train without having secured a roomette with bunk beds. Bob, bless him, took the top bunk while I lay back and watched the evening deepen. Some towns are served in the middle of the night, of course. Thankfully, the earliest we had to get on was 7:35 a.m. in San Jose, California. I had over 82,000 Amtrak points from using a credit card from Chase Bank, which paid for almost all of the train ticket, the roomette and the food. Unfortunately, Bank of America now holds the Amtrak card, and their interest rate, set by the Wall Street Journal and Rupert Murdoch, is much higher compared to other banks. So for our next train adventure, we will have to save our pennies! Remember that saying attributed to Benjamin Franklin, “watch your pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.” I can hardly wait.


DESERT EXPOSURE

OCTOBER 2016 • 55

LIVING ON WHEELS • SHEILA SOWDER

Surviving In a Small Space What to do about too-much-togetherness syndrome

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eonardo Da Vinci said “Small rooms or dwellings discipline the mind; large ones weaken it.” I’ll bet Leo was never cooped up in a 250 square-foot motor home with his spouse for a solid week of rain. Let’s just see how disciplined his mind is after that! Which introduces our subject of the week: How RVing couples overcome the problem of too much togetherness. Oh, I hear you say in your innocence, the outdoors will be our living room. Besides, we really enjoy each other’s company. Uh-huh, for a few hours in the evening after being separated all day by jobs, and on weekends when you have activities planned. But day in and day out, confined to a floor space about the size of a hotel room, where you can hear every noise, every identical NPR program she listens to, every Hank Williams cry-in-your-beer song he thinks is the ideal background sound? If you’re full-timing and on the move constantly, there are always new places to explore; new experiences to share. But many RVers end up spending larger and larger chunks of time in one place, with many moving only seasonally. And while doing absolutely nothing may sound wonderful after working 40 hours a week for 40 years, that’s when the too-much-togetherness syndrome sets in. It starts with a slightly sharper tone of voice when answering a simple question. Progresses to little sarcastic digs. Then come the raised voices, the tears, slammed doors, maybe, in extreme circumstances, a plate thrown to the floor which, since sensible RVers mostly use plastic, isn’t quite as satisfying as crockery breaking. Followed by the injured and righteous silence lasting anywhere from an hour to a couple of days, depending on the temperament of the combatants. What do seasoned RVers do to avoid this dreaded condition? My investigation included personal experiences and those shared by my ever-ready source of fulltime RVers. The best overall advice came from Barbara Lopes, a 6-year veteran RVer. “Put time into understanding the interests and needs of both of you, and then figure out how to accommodate them before starting your RV life.” None of the RVers I talked could admit to doing that, but we all agreed it would have been a really good idea. So I asked them, what do you do to avoid the too-much-togetherness syndrome? Especially if you’re staying in a park without all the activities of a high-end resort. Following are the solutions they came up with. Socializing: First, think about whether you’re good at putting yourself out there socially or

RVer Gerri Kalish specializes in Desert Sunset paintings. (Courtesy Photo) is a talented artist who had two desert sunset paintings chosen for inclusion in this year’s Grant County Art Guild’s Purchase Prize Award competition. We’ve met knitters, jewelry makers, weavers, and a gentleman who made flamingoes out of PVC pipe which he sold from his RV. Writing: RV living seems to attract writers. I was able to finish writing and editing a mystery in Florida one winter and even published it myself on Amazon’s amazing createspace.com website. My friend Gordon Grindstaff wrote and published the hilarious “Travels with Susie,” tales of his RVing experience, and also contributes an RVing article to his newspaper back home. Josh Kalish, a Rose Valley RV Ranch resident, wrote a blog about current issues and world politics. And at one RV park, I joined a memoir writing group organized by summer residents. Musicians: We were fortunate a couple of years ago to have a RVers Patty and Joel Breitenhirt wearing their GRMC Auxiliary group of excellent musicians, RVers that met at the park, who volunteer vests. (Courtesy Photo) entertained at our Friday happy hours. Offers of free musical occasionally. tend to hang back for fear of Physical Activities: hiking, entertainment are welcome at seeming too pushy? Because in RV parks where almost everyone biking, tennis, golf, fishing, ca- most RV parks. Volunteering: Many organizais a stranger, you’ll be surprised noeing, you name it. Check out at how receptive most people the availability of line dancing tions welcome and effectively are to overtures of friendship, and square dancing lessons in use temporary residents. Joel and even temporary friends can the community. And many fit- and Patty Breitenhirt, Rose Valrelieve loneliness, provide com- ness clubs and exercise classes ley summer residents, joined panionship, and give you some- have short term memberships the hospital auxiliary and volunteered weekly at the hospital. thing discuss with your spouse or charge by the visit. Arts and Crafts: Barbara Another couple visits nursing later. Extroverts are always appreciated, and those introverts and Dan Lopes enjoy quilting homes with their two friendly among us can at least smile small items and beading greet- pooches during their extended and be receptive to the friendly ing cards, most of which they stays. Ham radio operators? Reovertures of others. Maybe even donate to local churches for initiate a simple conversation fundraisers. RVer Gerri Kalish mote-control aircraft enthusi-

asts? ATV riders? The only limit is your own imagination. Diane Fausser tells of an elderly gentleman who wandered the RV park constantly, often peering in at the windows of other RVs, looking for someone, anyone, to talk to. Don’t risk becoming a window peeper. Decide what you enjoy, and stock the needed supplies so you’re ready for that rainy day. And when you settle in a location for more than a few days, check the local papers and online activities listings for information. I’ll admit to having an aversion to the idea of anyone sitting around doing nothing hour after hour, day in and day out. I think most people are healthier and happier if they’re engaged in productive and enjoyable activity at least part of the time, even if they’re fulltime RVers. In my experience, the happiest RV couples don’t sit and stare at the TV or computer screen all day. They keep moving and participate in activities that provide the stimulation and creativity necessary for a satisfying life.

Sheila and husband Jimmy Sowder have lived at Rose Valley RV Ranch in Silver City for four years following four years of wandering the US from Maine to California. She can be contacted at sksowder@ aol.com.


56 • OCTOBER 2016

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KEEP YOUR 4 STAR QUALITY CARE CLOSE TO HOME

KEEP YOUR 4 STAR QUALITY CARE CLOSE TO HOME.

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